Foreword
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 August 2009
Summary
When I was a very young boy I was enchanted by airplanes. The very idea that such a machine, with no apparent motions of its own – except, of course, for that tiny rotating thing at the front – could fly through the air was amazing. I could see that birds and insects could all fly with great dexterity, but that was because they could flap their wings, and thus support their weight as well as maneuver. And fish could even “fly” through water by motions of their body. How exciting it was then, to begin to learn something about how objects interact with the fluids surrounding them, and the useful consequences of those flows. That ultimately led, of course, to the broad study of fluid dynamics, with all of its wonderful manifestations.
There is hardly a single aspect of our daily lives, and indeed even of the entire universe in which we live, that is not in some way governed or described by fluid dynamics – from the locomotion of marine animals to the birth and death of distant galaxies. As a major field of technical and scientific knowledge, there are vast bodies of literature devoted to almost every facet of fluid behavior: laminar and turbulent flows, discontinuous (separated) flows, vortex flows, internal waves, free surface waves, compressible fluids and shock waves, multi-phase flows, and many, many others. With such a countless array of fluid phenomenon before us, what then leads to the focus of the present work?
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- Liquid Sloshing DynamicsTheory and Applications, pp. xii - xiiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005