D'Alembert's paradox
D'Alembert's paradox states that an inviscid (non-viscous), incompressible flow produces no drag on an object surrounded by such fluid. It is named after Jean le Rond d'Alembert
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2 Examples and Further Discussion 3 External Link |
Discussion
If a fluid is viscous, then its flow cannot be irrotational:
- viscous → ¬ irrotational (1)
- irrotational → ¬ viscous. (from proposition (1), by Modus tollens)
- if (
→ viscous) then (
→ ). What if
(i.e. divergence is zero) and (i.e. curl is zero)? Then the fluid is Laplacian. An object moving through a Laplacian fluid which is at rest (except locally for its displacement by and around the object) suffers no drag from the fluid. This is a paradox: real fluids produce drag. For example: air is known to produce drag, otherwise parachutes would be useless. If a gas produces drag, how could a liquid not produce drag? (Since liquids are denser than gases. On the other hand, gases are compressible, and D'Alembert's paradox applies only to incompressible fluids.)
Perhaps the answer to this paradox is that Laplacian fluids do not really exist in nature: they are a mathematical abstraction. This would imply that
Proposition (2) means that:
- solenoidal → rotational.
- solenoidal → viscous
- rotational → viscous.
- viscous ↔ rotational (warning: this might not be true).
- inviscid ↔ irrotational (warning: this might not be true),
Examples and Further Discussion
Rotational means non-zero curl. Proposition (1) above stated that- viscous → rotational,
- rotational → viscous?
Example Two: Now imagine a finite, cylindrical uniform vortex:
Outside the vortex the fluid is still moving in circular streamlines, but the vorticity is zero. How can this be so? Because the vorticity of the circular motion is cancelled out exactly by shearing: be the deceleration of the fluid with distance: this shearing strain by itself is viscous, but it is cancelled out by the circular motion: irrotational, therefore non-viscous. Is viscosity acting here? Apparently not, even though the vortex is rotational, at least not mathematically, but perhaps it is acting physically.
Example Three: Imagine a jet stream, fluid moving uniformly inside an imaginary tube, like a laser beam. There is no physical boundary between the jet stream and the surrounding motionless fluid. The vorticity at the boundary is infinite, everywhere else it is zero: vorticity is discontinuous (and the velocity field is discontinuous, and perhaps not everywhere differentiable). The problem is lack of viscosity. Viscosity would smooth out the vorticity (curl). Viscosity is a type of friction which dissipates energy. It is a shearing force.
Example Four: Change the last example so that the jet stream moves around in a ring (a torus). Let the fluid inside the ring move as if it were a solid. Then the vorticity throughout the ring is constant and non-zero, but the vorticity outside the ring is constant and zero. The velocity field is discontinuous and not everywhere differentiable, because vorticity at the boundaries of the ring is infinite.
If the ring were a solid and the surroundings were also solid, then the infinite vorticity would be an indicator of the place where friction between the solids would occur. With solids, friction is localized at the interfaces between different solids. With fluids, viscosity is spread out throughout the fluid and tends to smooth out discontinuities in the velocity field.
Viscosity is a shearing force: (F/A)/d. It is a reaction, not a cause. The cause is vorticity which is due to shear: velocities which are parallel and adjacent but unequal in magnitude. Regions of high vorticity are hot spots which viscosity would tend to reduce and diffuse.
Inviscid fluids are a mathematical idealization: all fluids should have some viscosity;
- rotational → viscous
A liquid is, for practical purposes, incompressible (indeed, that is how liquids retain volume when they change containers. Cf. Piaget's test for concrete operational stage of cognitive development). If it were also non-viscous, and therefore irrotational, then the liquid could not be stirred with a spoon to form a vortex: the spoon could not drag the liquid, because the liquid produces no drag on the spoon. Mathematically, this is due to the liquid being irrotational and therefore Laplacian. Physically, this is due to the fluid being non-viscous: it is unable to attach itself frictionally to the spoon.