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Compressible Flow




While the above definition for compressible flow holds for most of the cases, it is possible to have flows with varying density and the flow is still Incompressible . For example, consider a flow of Water in oceans or air flow in The Atmosphere . The density varies as we move to different Altitude s, but the flow can still be treated as incompressible. The factor that distinguishes a flow from being compressible or incompressible is the fact that in compressible flow the changes in the Velocity of the flow can lead to changes the temperature which are not negligible. On the other hand in case of incompressible flow, the changes in the internal energy (i.e. Temperature ) are negligible even if the entire Kinetic Energy of the flow is converted to internal energy (i.e. the flow is brought to rest).

These definitions, though they seem to be inconsistent, are all saying one and the same thing: the Mach number of the flow is high enough so that the effects of Compressibility can no longer be neglected.

For subsonic compressible flows, it is sometimes possible to model
the flow by applying a correction factor to the answers derived from
incompressible calculations or modelling - for example, the Prandtl-Glauert rule:

: rac{a_c}{a_i} \sim rac{1}{\sqrt{1-M^2}}

(ac is compressible lift curve slope, ai is the
incompressible lift curve slope, and M is the Mach number). Note that this correction only yields acceptable results over a range of approximately 0.3
For many other flows, their nature is qualitatively different to subsonic
flows. A flow where the local Mach number reaches or exceeds 1
will usually contain Shock Wave s. A shock is an abrupt change
in the velocity, pressure and temperature in a flow; the thickness of a
shock scales with the molecular mean free path in the fluid (typically
a few micrometers).

Shocks form because
information about conditions downstream of a point of sonic or supersonic
flow cannot propagate back upstream past the sonic point.

The behaviour of a fluid changes radically as it starts to move above
the speed of sound (in that fluid). For example, in subsonic flow, a
stream tube in an accelerating flow contracts. But in a supersonic
flow, a stream tube in an accelerating flow expands. To interpret this
in another way, consider steady flow in a tube that has a sudden expansion:
the tube's cross section suddenly widens, so the cross-sectional area
increases.

In subsonic flow, the fluid speed drops after the expansion (as expected).
In supersonic flow, the fluid speed increases. This sounds like a
contradiction, but it isn't: the mass flux is conserved but because
supersonic flow allows the density to change, the volume flux is not
constant. This effect is utilised in De Laval Nozzle s.


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