subdiscipline of fluid mechanics that deals with fluid flow—the natural science of fluids (liquids and gases) in motion
Fluid dynamics is the study of how liquids and gases move and behave when they're in motion. Understanding fluid flow matters because it helps us design better airplanes and ships, predict weather patterns, and solve countless engineering problems in everyday life.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Computer generated animation of fluid in a tube flowing past a cylinder, showing the shedding of a series of vortices in the flow behind it, called a von Kármán vortex street. The streamlines show the direction of the fluid flow, and the color gradient shows the pressure at each point, from blue to green, yellow, and red indicating increasing pressure Typical aerodynamic teardrop shape, assuming a viscous medium passing from left to right, the diagram shows the pressure distribution as the thickness of the black line and shows the velocity in the boundary layer as the violet triangles. The green vortex generators prompt the transition to turbulent flow and prevent back-flow also called flow separation from the high-pressure region in the back. The surface in front is as smooth as possible or even employs shark-like skin, as any turbulence here increases the energy of the airflow. The truncation on the right, known as a Kammback, also prevents backflow from the high-pressure region in the back across the spoilers to the convergent part.
Solid mechanics
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