Skip to main content

Online Store

T&R Bulletin 1-05: Nomenclature for Treating the Motion of a Submerged Body Through a Fluid (1950)

T&R Bulletin 1-05: Nomenclature for Treating the Motion of a Submerged Body Through a Fluid (1950)

Available
Rating: 0 out of 5
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
No Reviews
Quick Overview:

The study of the motion of a rigid body through a fluid is considered as a general problem in the motion o rigid bodies under the action of gravity and hydrodynamic forces. This a choice of n ...

Price:

$40.00 - T&R Bulletin 1-05: Nomenclature for Treating the Motion of a Submerged Body Through a Fluid (1950)- List Price

$20.00 - T&R Bulletin 1-05: Nomenclature for Treating the Motion of a Submerged Body Through a Fluid (1950) - Member Price

$20.00 - T&R Bulletin 1-05: Nomenclature for Treating the Motion of a Submerged Body Through a Fluid (1950) - Student Member Price

Number of pages:16
Year published:1950
Share it:
Add to Cart
40.00
Required
Description
The study of the motion of a rigid body through a fluid is considered as a general problem in the motion o rigid bodies under the action of gravity and hydrodynamic forces. This a choice of nomenclature for this field mist borrow from both rigid dynamics and fluid mechanics.
Like most problems in hydrodynamics, an exact theoretical solution of the equations of motion is available only for an idea fluid. However, as is well known, for small deviations from uniform linear motion, the equations of motion in a real fluid can linearized and solved in terms of a set of coefficients, which are determined either by theory or by experiment. 
Frequently, rather than to determine the trajectory of a body, it suffices to obtain a measure of its stability. A body in a state of equilibrium is said to be stable if, when slightly disturbed from this state, it returns to it, with perhaps a slight change in position of path. Since there are various possible states of equilibrium, there are, correspondingly, various possible kinds of stability; these are defined in a subsequent section of this Bulletin. 
Although the motion can be described adequately only with reference to some fixed coordinate system, it is shown in texts on dynamics that the equations of motion of a rigid body are expressed most conveniently in terms of a rectangular coordinate system moving with the body., the so-called body axes. Consequently, it has been necessary to introduce nomenclature for describing the orientation of the body axes relative to the fixed axes.
We're sorry, but there is no inventory for the product you selected. Check out these other great products:

Related Products

    Other Purchased Products

      Reviews

      No records found.