Sec1 3-8
Sec1 3-8
Sec1 3-8
Dr Natalia Berloff
§1.3 Material derivative
Rate of change with time seen by an observer moving with fluid, DF Dt , is found by using
the chain rule for differentiation (Remember: the value of x for a given fluid particle varies
with time)
DF ∂F
Material derivative: Dt ≡ ∂t + u · ∇F
Equation holds for arbitrary V , hence, assuming that integrands are continuous functions,
∂ρ
+ ∇ · (ρu) = 0 , (1)
∂t
the equation of mass conservation.
We have ∇ · (ρu) = u · ∇ρ + ρ∇ · u , and so equation (1) above can be rewritten as
Dρ
+ ρ∇ · u = 0 . (2)
Dt
i.e. following a fluid parcel the rate of change of density is proportional to the divergence
of the velocity field.
We continue to assume that fluid is neither created nor destroyed, and restrict attention
to the case of an impermeable boundary: no fluid can get across it. We assume that
the fluid stays in contact with boundary.
If the boundary is stationary, then
impermeability ⇒
where n is normal to the boundary. If the boundary is moving with velocity U, then
relative to the moving boundary, the fluid velocity is
The normal component of velocity relative to the boundary, i.e. the normal component of
u − U, is zero:
u·n=U·n .
Boundary condition on free surface: (relevant to wave theory later in the course):
Let the shape of the surface be z = ζ(x, y, t).
∂ζ ∂ζ ∂ζ
+u +v − w = 0.
∂t ∂x ∂y
§1.6 Incompressibility
From here on, in this course, we restrict attention to fluid behaviour for which ρ can
be taken to be constant. Consider for convenience the second, D/Dt form of the mass
conservation equation derived in §1.3:
∇·u=0 . (3)
The velocity field is nondivergent, i.e. solenoidal. This expresses mass conservation for
incompressible flow.
*Notice that the assumption of constant ρ excludes sound waves: the assumption can be shown to be
consistent when fluid velocities |u| sound speed, 340 m s−1 in air at 1 bar and 15◦ C; ∼ 1500 m s−1 in
water. Constant ρ also implies that we are excluding density-driven flows such as thermal convection.*
Example: u = (y, x)
Note that u = ∇ψ × k, where k = (0, 0, 1), a unit vector perpendicular to the xy plane.
Main properties:
(1) ψ(x, y) = const are stream lines, because they are tangential to u:
(2) |u| = |∇ψ|; therefore, fluid moves faster where streamlines are closer;
(3) Consider two points x0 and x1 joined by some curve C on which the line element is dl.
Stream functions for axisymmetric flow are sometimes called Stokes stream functions.
§1.8 Motion of a material line element
A material line element is a small line element marked in the fluid, i.e., made up of fluid
parcels, with end points X1 (t) and X2 (t) moving with the flow.
We write δl(t) = X2 (t) − X1 (t). Then the rate of change of δl(t) is