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Mechanics of Fluids Fourth Edition

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dc.contributor.author Merle C. Potter, David C. Wiggert
dc.date.accessioned 2024-08-27T13:48:44Z
dc.date.available 2024-08-27T13:48:44Z
dc.date.issued 2012
dc.identifier.isbn 978-0-495-66773-5
dc.identifier.uri http://10.250.8.41:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/46021
dc.description.abstract The motivation to write a book is difficult to describe. Most often the authors suggest that the other texts on the subject have certain deficiencies that they will correct, such as an accurate description of entrance flows and flows around blunt objects, the difference between a one-dimensional flow and a uniform flow, the proper presentation of the control volume derivation, or a definition of laminar flow that makes sense. New authors, of course, introduce other deficiencies that future authors hope to correct! And life goes on. This is another fluids book that has been written in hopes of presenting an improved view of fluid mechanics so that the undergraduate can understand the physical concepts and follow the mathematics. This is not an easy task: Fluid mechanics is a subject that contains many difficult-to-understand phenomena. For example, how would you explain the hole scooped out in the sand by the water on the upstream side of an abutment? Or the high concentration of smog contained in the Los Angeles area (it doesn’t exist to the same level in New York)? Or the unexpected strong wind around the corner of a tall building in Chicago? Or the vibration and subsequent collapse of a large concrete-steel bridge due to the wind? Or the trailing vortices observed from a large aircraft? We have attempted to present fluid mechanics so that the student can understand and analyze many of the important phenomena encountered by the engineer. The mathematical level of this book is based on previous mathematics courses required in all engineering curricula. We use solutions to differential equations and vector algebra. Some use is made of vector calculus with the use of the gradient operator, but this is kept to a minimum since it tends to obscure the physics involved. Many popular texts in fluid mechanics have not presented fluid flows as fields. That is, they have presented primarily those flows that can be approximated as one-dimensional flows and have treated other flows using experimental data. We must recognize that when a fluid flows around an object, such as a building or an abutment, its velocity possesses all three components which depend on all three space variables and often, time. If we present the equations that describe such a general flow, the equations are referred to as field equations, and velocity and pressure fields become of interest. This is quite analogous to electrical and en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Cengage Learning en_US
dc.title Mechanics of Fluids Fourth Edition en_US
dc.type Book en_US


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