Oseen equations

In fluid dynamics, the Oseen equations (or Oseen flow) describe the flow of a viscous and incompressible fluid at small Reynolds numbers, as formulated by Carl Wilhelm Oseen in 1910. Oseen flow is an improved description of these flows, as compared to Stokes flow, by the partial inclusion of convective acceleration.[1]

The fundamental solution due to a singular point force embedded in an Oseen flow is the Oseenlet. The closed-form fundamental solutions for generalized unsteady Stokes and Oseen flows associated with arbitrary time-dependent translational and rotational motions have been derived for Newtonian[2] and micropolar[3] fluids.

Using the Oseen equation, Horace Lamb was able to derive improved expressions for the viscous flow around a sphere in 1911, improving on Stokes law towards somewhat higher Reynolds numbers.[1] Also, Lamb derived—for the first time—a solution for the viscous flow around a circular cylinder.[1]

The Oseen equations are, in case of an object moving with a steady flow velocity U through the fluid—which is at rest far from the object—and in a frame of reference attached to the object:[1]


\begin{align}
  -\rho \mathbf{U}\cdot\nabla\mathbf{u} &= -\nabla p\, +\, \mu \nabla^2 \mathbf{u},
  \\
  \nabla\cdot\mathbf{u} &= 0,
\end{align}

where

The boundary conditions for the Oseen flow around a rigid object are:


\begin{align}
  \mathbf{u} &= \mathbf{U} & & \text{at the object surface},
  \\
  \mathbf{u} &\to 0 & & \text{and} \quad p \to p_{\infty} \quad \text{for} \quad r \to \infty,
\end{align}

with r the distance from the object's center, and p the undisturbed pressure far from the object.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Batchelor (2000), §4.10, pp. 240–246.
  2. Shu, Jian-Jun; Chwang, A.T. (2001). "Generalized fundamental solutions for unsteady viscous flows". Physical Review E 63 (5): 051201. arXiv:1403.3247. Bibcode:2001PhRvE..63e1201S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.63.051201.
  3. Shu, Jian-Jun; Lee, J.S. (2008). "Fundamental solutions for micropolar fluids". Journal of Engineering Mathematics 61 (1): 69–79. arXiv:1402.5023. Bibcode:2008JEnMa..61...69S. doi:10.1007/s10665-007-9160-8.

References

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