Chapter 1 Intorduction
Chapter 1 Intorduction
INTRODUCTION
Mechanics: The oldest physical science that deals with both stationary and moving bodies under the
influence of forces.
Statics: The branch of mechanics that deals with bodies at rest.
Dynamics: The branch that deals with bodies in motion.
Fluid mechanics: The science that deals with the behavior of fluids at rest (fluid statics) or in motion
(fluid dynamics), and the interaction of fluids with solids or other fluids at the boundaries.
Fluid dynamics: Fluid mechanics is also referred to as fluid dynamics by considering fluids at rest as
a special case of motion with zero velocity.
Hydrodynamics: The study of the motion of fluids that can be approximated as incompressible
(such as liquids, especially water, and gases at low speeds).
Hydraulics: A subcategory of hydrodynamics, which deals with liquid flows in pipes and open
channels.
Gas dynamics: Deals with the flow of fluids that undergo significant density changes, such as
the flow of gases through nozzles at high speeds.
Aerodynamics: Deals with the flow of gases (especially air) over bodies such as aircraft,
rockets, and automobiles at high or low speeds.
Meteorology, oceanography, and hydrology: Deal with naturally occurring flows.
Stress: Force per unit area.
Normal stress: The normal
component of a force acting on a
surface per unit area.
Shear stress: The tangential
component of a force acting on a
surface per unit area.
Pressure: The normal stress in a
fluid at rest.
Zero shear stress: A fluid at rest is
at a state of zero shear stress.
When the walls are removed or a
liquid container is tilted, a shear
develops as the liquid moves to The normal stress and shear stress at
the surface of a fluid element. For
re-establish a horizontal free
fluids at rest, the shear stress is zero
surface. and pressure is the only normal stress.
What is a Fluid?
Incompressible flow: If the density of flowing fluid remains nearly constant throughout
(e.g., liquid flow).
Compressible flow: If the density of fluid changes during flow (e.g., high-speed gas flow)
When analyzing rockets, spacecraft, and other systems that involve high-speed gas
flows, the flow speed is often expressed by Mach number
Ma = 1 Sonic flow
Ma < 1 Subsonic flow
Ma > 1 Supersonic flow
Ma >> 1 Hypersonic flow
Laminar versus Turbulent Flow
The development of the velocity profile in a circular pipe. V = V(r, z) and thus the flow is
two-dimensional in the entrance region, and becomes one-dimensional downstream when
the velocity profile fully develops and remains unchanged in the flow direction, V = V(r).
SYSTEM AND CONTROL VOLUME
• System: A quantity of matter or a region in
space chosen for study.
• Surroundings: The mass or region outside the
system
• Boundary: The real or imaginary surface that
separates the system from its surroundings.
• The boundary of a system can be fixed or
movable.
• Systems may be considered to be closed or
open.
• Closed system
(Control mass):
A fixed Quantity
amount of mass,
and no mass
can cross its
boundary.
• Open system (control volume): A properly selected region in space.
• It usually encloses a device that involves mass flow such as a compressor, turbine, or
nozzle.
• Both mass and Energy can cross the boundary of a control volume. (Mass quantity
remains same, however, energy quantity may change e.g. in a geyser)
• Control surface: The boundaries of a control volume. It can be real or imaginary. For
example, the control surface for the flow of air over an airplane wing is the real surface
of the wing. The control surface for the flow of water through a pipe is an imaginary
surface that encloses the pipe.
An open system (a
control volume) with one
inlet and one exit.
IMPORTANCE OF DIMENSIONS AND UNITS
A body weighing
150 kgf on earth
will weigh only 25
on the moon.
Unity Conversion
Ratios
All nonprimary units (secondary units) can be
formed by combinations of primary units.
Force units, for example, can be expressed as
To be dimensionally
homogeneous, all the
Unity conversion ratios are identically equal to 1 and terms in an equation
are unitless, and thus such ratios (or their inverses) must have the same unit.
can be inserted conveniently into any calculation to
properly convert units.
Every unity conversion ratio (as well
as its inverse) is exactly equal to one.
Shown here are a few commonly used
unity conversion ratios.
Always check the units in your
calculations.