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sigfred yu
26th Nov 2011, 14:10
The Hell with this q >.<

Q : Describe the flow of fluid particles that follow the contour of a solid surface

a)Turbulent
b)Streamlined
c)Restricted


PLEASE DO NOT ANSWER IF NOT SO SURE

THANKS ^_^

Andy_RR
26th Nov 2011, 18:18
b) Streamlined

The contour of the solid object meets the strict definition of a streamline, that is a line across which the imaginary fluid particles do not flow

sigfred yu
26th Nov 2011, 19:13
YOU ROCK :}

Thanks a TON :}

Seabreeze
27th Nov 2011, 07:32
Streamlined flow and turbulent flow are fundamentally different.

All flows must be parallel to a solid boundary at molecular distances, but streamline flows are parallel at slightly larger distances and if some sort of flow visualisation is used (say smoke in air or dye in water etc) time lapse photos show that all particles are following the same paths which are parallel to solid surfaces even if they are curved.

For turbulent flows, there are time dependent fluctuations existing at all times, and while average flows may be predictable, instantaneous flows at any location may be different in both direction and magnitude from those observed at an earlier time.

It is possible for flows in a boundary layer to be turbulent while flows outside that boundary layer can be laminar. Bernoulli's theorem which allows estimation of pressure fields for laminar flows ( P + 1/2 rho V**2 = constant along a streamline) shows that Pressure P is reduced if fluid velocity V is larger. So over the top of an aerofoil where V is larger, P is reduced, and the net effect is that the higher pressure P below the aerofoil compared to that above provides lift.

In a turbulent boundary layer (aft of the separation point on an aerofoil upper surface in a stall), flows are unpredictable AND Bernoulli's theorem doesn't apply. The reduced pressure is much less pronounced; and lift is much reduced.

SB

Jack Ranga
28th Nov 2011, 04:26
That cleared it up for ya? (ya poor bastard)

b_sta
28th Nov 2011, 05:33
As far as I was aware Newton's third law is now the flavour of the day in terms of theory of lift production, although Bernoulli still finds popularity with CASA.

(Not that this has any direct relation to streamlined, turbulent, laminar or any other kind of flow!)

Tagneah
28th Nov 2011, 06:22
The correct answer is always the longest one. Or Coriollis force.

lk978
28th Nov 2011, 23:23
S*^% flows down hill :E