Elementary flow
In the larger context of the Navier-Stokes equations, elementary flows are basic flows that can be combined, using various techniques, to construct more complex flows. In this article the term "flow" is used interchangeably with the term "solution" due to historical reasons.
The techniques involved to create more complex solutions can be
for example by superposition, by techniques such as topology or considering them as local solutions on a certain neighborhood, subdomain or boundary layer and to be patched together. Elementary flows can be considered the basic building blocks of the different types of equations derived from the Navier-Stokes equations. Some of the flows reflect specific constraints such as incompressible or irrotational flows, or both, as in the case of potential flow, and some of the flows may be limited to the case of two dimensions.
Due to the relationship between fluid dynamics and field theory, elementary flows are relevant not only to aerodynamics but to all field theory in general. To put it in perspective boundary layers can be interpreted as topological defects on generic manifolds, and considering fluid dynamics analogies and limit cases in electromagnetism, quantum mechanics and general relativity one can see how all these solutions are at the core of recent developments in theoretical physics such as the ads/cft duality, the SYK model, the physics of nematic liquids, strongly correlated systems and even to quark gluon plasmas.
Two-dimensional uniform flow
For steady-state, spatially uniform flow of a fluid in the plane, the velocity vector iswhere
Because this flow is incompressible and two-dimensional, its velocity can be expressed in terms of a stream function, :
where
and is a constant.
In cylindrical coordinates:
and
This flow is irrotational so its velocity can be expressed in terms of a potential function, :
where
and is a constant.
In cylindrical coordinates
Two-dimensional line source
The case of a vertical line emitting at a fixed rate a constant quantity of fluid Q per unit length is a line source. The problem has a cylindrical symmetry and can be treated in two dimensions on the orthogonal plane.Line sources and line sinks are important elementary flows because they play the role of monopole for incompressible fluids. Generic flow patterns can be also de-composed in terms of multipole expansions, in the same manner as for electric and magnetic fields where the monopole is essentially the first non-trivial term of the expansion.
This flow pattern is also both irrotational and incompressible.
This is characterized by a cylindrical symmetry:
Where the total outgoing flux is constant
Therefore,
This is derived from a stream function
or from a potential function
Two-dimensional line sink
The case of a vertical line absorbing at a fixed rate a constant quantity of fluid Q per unit length is a line sink. Everything is the same as the case of a line source a part from the negative sign.This is derived from a stream function
or from a potential function
Given that the two results are the same a part from a minus sign we can treat transparently both line sources and line sinks with the same stream and potential functions permitting Q to assume both positive and negative values and absorbing the minus sign into the definition of Q.
Two-dimensional doublet or dipole line source
If we consider a line source and a line sink at a distance d we can reuse the results above and the stream function will beThe last approximation is to the first order in d.
Given
It remains
The velocity is then
And the potential instead
Two-dimensional vortex line
This is the case of a vortex filament rotating at constant speed, there is a cylindrical symmetry and the problem can be solved in the orthogonal plane.Dual to the case above of line sources, vortex lines play the role of monopoles for irrotational flows.
Also in this case the flow is also both irrotational and incompressible and therefore a case of potential flow.
This is characterized by a cylindrical symmetry:
Where the total circulation is constant for every closed line around the central vortex
and is zero for any line not including the vortex.
Therefore,
This is derived from a stream function
or from a potential function
Which is dual to the previous case of a line source
Generic two-dimensional potential flow
Given an incompressible two-dimensional flow which is also irrotational we have:Which is in cylindrical coordinates
We look for a solution with separated variables:
which gives
Given the left part depends only on r and the right parts depends only on, the two parts must be equal to a constant independent from r and. The constant shall be positive.
Therefore,
The solution to the second equation is a linear combination of and
In order to have a single-valued velocity m shall be a positive integer.
therefore the most generic solution is given by
The potential is instead given by