04809nam 22007573u 450 991100708600332120230802010932.09780486134895048613489X97816219864471621986446(CKB)2550000001186569(EBL)1894782(SSID)ssj0001002789(PQKBManifestationID)12449627(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001002789(PQKBWorkID)11016247(PQKB)11721683(MiAaPQ)EBC1894782(Au-PeEL)EBL1894782(CaONFJC)MIL565940(OCoLC)898421370(Perlego)110822(EXLCZ)99255000000118656920141222d2012|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||txtccrVectors, Tensors and the Basic Equations of Fluid Mechanics1st ed.Newburyport Dover Publications20121 online resource (606 p.)Dover Books on MathematicsDescription based upon print version of record.9780486661100 0486661105 9781306346894 1306346894 DOVER BOOKS ON MATHEMATICS; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Preface; Table of Contents; 1 - Introduction; 1.1. Mathematical theories and engineering science; 1.2. Scalars, vectors, and tensors; 1.3. Preview; BIBLIOGRAPHY; 2 - Cartesian Vectors and Tensors: Their Algebra; 2.11. Definition of a vector; 2.12. Example of vectors; 2.13. Scalar multiplication; 2.21. Addition of vectors - Coplanar vectors; 2.22. Unit vectors; 2.23. A basis of non-coplanar vectors; 2.31. Scalar product - Orthogonality; 2.32. Vector product; 2.33. Velocity due to rigid body rotation2.34. Triple scalar product2.35. Triple vector product; 2.36. Reciprocal base systems; 2.41. Second order tensors; 2.42. Examples of second order tensors; 2.43. Scalar multiplication and addition; 2.44. Contraction and multiplication; 2.45. The vector of an antisymmetric tensor; 2.5. Canonical form of a symmetric tensor; 2.61. Higher order tensors; 2.62. The quotient rule; 2.7. Isotropic tensors; 2.81. Dyadics and other notations; 2.82. Axial vectors; BIBLIOGRAPHY; 3 - Cartesian Vectors and Tensors: Their Calculus; 3.11. Tensor functions of a time-like variable; 3.12. Curves in space4.12. Streamlines4.13. Streaklines; 4.21. Dilatation; 4.22. Reynolds' transport theorem; 4.3. Conservation of mass and the equation of continuity; 4.41. Deformation and rate of strain; 4.42. Physical interpretation of the deformation tensor; 4.43. Principal axes of deformation; 4.5. Vorticity, vortex lines, and tubes; 5 - Stress in Fluids; 5.11. Cauchy's stress principle and the conservation of momentum; 5.12. The stress tensor; 5.13. The symmetry of the stress tensor; 5.14. Hydrostatic pressure; 5.15. Principal axes of stress and the notion of isotropy; 5.21. The Stokesian fluid5.22. Constitutive equations of the Stokesian fluid5.23. The Newtonian fluid; 5.24. Interpretation of the constants λ and μ; 6 - Equations of Motion and Energy in Cartesian Coordinates; 6.11. Equations of motion of a Newtonian fluid; 6.12. Boundary conditions; 6.13. The Reynolds number; 6.14. Dissipation of energy by viscous forces; 6.2. Equations for a Stokesian fluid; 6.3. The energy equation; 6.41. Résumé of the development of the equations; 6.42. Special cases of the equations; 6.51. Bernoulli theorems; 6.52. Some further properties of barotropic flow; 7 - Tensors7.11. Coordinate systems and conventions<DIV>This introductory text is geared toward engineers, physicists, and applied mathematicians at the advanced undergraduate and graduate levels. It applies the mathematics of Cartesian and general tensors to physical field theories and demonstrates them chiefly in terms of the theory of fluid mechanics. Numerous exercises appear throughout the text. 1962 edition.</DIV>Dover Books on MathematicsFluid dynamicsCalculus of tensorsVector analysisEngineering & Applied SciencesHILCCApplied MathematicsHILCCFluid dynamics.Calculus of tensors.Vector analysis.Engineering & Applied SciencesApplied Mathematics532Aris Rutherford6052AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9911007086003321Vectors, tensors, and the basic equations of fluid mechanics127671UNINA