Struggling with Proof of Prandtl's Boundary Layer EquationsWall boundary conditionFinding a composite solution to an ODE (boundary layer problem)Finding ideal fluid flow with a boundaryGradient of parametric surfaceEigenvalue solution of a 2nd order ODE of a geophysical fluid dynamic problemBoundary layer ODE, is my solution okay?Conditions necessary for a boundary layer to existWhy is the first derivative of a scalar-valued function with respect to a vector its gradient?Thin film flow boundary conditionsAbsence of Pressure gradient in Boundary Layer?
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Struggling with Proof of Prandtl's Boundary Layer Equations
Wall boundary conditionFinding a composite solution to an ODE (boundary layer problem)Finding ideal fluid flow with a boundaryGradient of parametric surfaceEigenvalue solution of a 2nd order ODE of a geophysical fluid dynamic problemBoundary layer ODE, is my solution okay?Conditions necessary for a boundary layer to existWhy is the first derivative of a scalar-valued function with respect to a vector its gradient?Thin film flow boundary conditionsAbsence of Pressure gradient in Boundary Layer?
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Would someone with knowledge in fluid mechanics please help me in understanding this man's argument for why dp/dy, the pressure gradient in the boundary layer, must equal zero?
I would greatly appreciate this as I have watched his video numerous times trying to follow his argument.
His reasoning is at the 2:28 mark in the video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h3RuIhR6TTU&index=5&list=PLPhpE8md80HOfBesybSGUcba2YWce4_fz
partial-derivative physics fluid-dynamics boundary-layer
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Would someone with knowledge in fluid mechanics please help me in understanding this man's argument for why dp/dy, the pressure gradient in the boundary layer, must equal zero?
I would greatly appreciate this as I have watched his video numerous times trying to follow his argument.
His reasoning is at the 2:28 mark in the video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h3RuIhR6TTU&index=5&list=PLPhpE8md80HOfBesybSGUcba2YWce4_fz
partial-derivative physics fluid-dynamics boundary-layer
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Would someone with knowledge in fluid mechanics please help me in understanding this man's argument for why dp/dy, the pressure gradient in the boundary layer, must equal zero?
I would greatly appreciate this as I have watched his video numerous times trying to follow his argument.
His reasoning is at the 2:28 mark in the video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h3RuIhR6TTU&index=5&list=PLPhpE8md80HOfBesybSGUcba2YWce4_fz
partial-derivative physics fluid-dynamics boundary-layer
$endgroup$
Would someone with knowledge in fluid mechanics please help me in understanding this man's argument for why dp/dy, the pressure gradient in the boundary layer, must equal zero?
I would greatly appreciate this as I have watched his video numerous times trying to follow his argument.
His reasoning is at the 2:28 mark in the video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h3RuIhR6TTU&index=5&list=PLPhpE8md80HOfBesybSGUcba2YWce4_fz
partial-derivative physics fluid-dynamics boundary-layer
partial-derivative physics fluid-dynamics boundary-layer
edited Apr 4 at 11:43
YuiTo Cheng
2,3184937
2,3184937
asked Mar 29 at 22:27
Anteater23Anteater23
114
114
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