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3 - Equations of Aerodynamics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2012

Gary A. Flandro
Affiliation:
The University of Tennessee Space Institute
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Summary

Introduction

To solve the fundamental problems of aerodynamics defined in Chapter 1, it is necessary to formulate a mathematical representation of the underlying fluid dynamics. The appropriate mathematical expressions or sets of equations may be algebraic, integral, or differential in character but will always represent basic physical laws or principles. In this chapter, the fundamental equations necessary for the solution of aerodynamics problems are derived directly from the basic laws of nature. The resulting mathematical formulations represent a large class of fluid mechanics problems within which aerodynamics is an important subclass.

Some problems in aerodynamics require solutions for all of the variables needed to describe a moving stream of gas—namely, velocity, pressure, temperature, and density. Because velocity is a vector quantity (i.e., with magnitude and direction), in a general case there are three scalar velocity components. Thus, in many cases of interest, there is a total of six unknowns: three velocity components and the scalar thermodynamic quantities of pressure, temperature, and density.* This requires six independent equations to be written to solve for the six unknowns. The physical laws of conservation of mass, momentum, and energy supply five such equations (i.e., the momentum equation is a vector equation; therefore, conservation of momentum leads in general to three component equations). For all of the subject matter in this book, the assumption of an ideal gas is physically realistic. Thus, the perfect gas law (i.e., equation of state) p = ρRT, which relates pressure, density, and temperature, supplies the final equation needed to solve for the six unknowns.

Type
Chapter
Information
Basic Aerodynamics
Incompressible Flow
, pp. 48 - 109
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

Johnson, Richard W.The Handbook of Fluid DynamicsCRC Press, LLC 1998Google Scholar
Kuethe, A. M.Schetzer, J. D.Foundations of AerodynamicsJohn Wiley & SonsNew York 1961Google Scholar
Schlichting, HermannBoundary Layer TheoryMcGraw-Hill Book CompanyNew York 1979Google Scholar
Serrin, J.Mathematical Principles of Classic Fluid DynamicsFlugge, S.Handbuch der PhysikSpringer-VerlagBerlin, Heidelberg, New York125 1959Google Scholar
Wilcox, David C.Basic Fluid MechanicsDCW Industries, Inc. 2007Google Scholar

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