Stability of Fluid Motions II

The study of stability aims at understanding the abrupt changes which are observed in fluid motions as the external parameters are varied. It is a demanding study, far from full grown, whose most interesting conclusions are recent. I have written a detailed account of those parts of the recent theor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Joseph, D. D.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 1976, 1976
Edition:1st ed. 1976
Series:Springer Tracts in Natural Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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100 1 |a Joseph, D. D. 
245 0 0 |a Stability of Fluid Motions II  |h Elektronische Ressource  |c by D. D. Joseph 
250 |a 1st ed. 1976 
260 |a Berlin, Heidelberg  |b Springer Berlin Heidelberg  |c 1976, 1976 
300 |a XIV, 276 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a § 66. Energy Stability of Heated below and Salted above -- §67. Heated and Salted from below: Linear Theory -- §68. Heated and Salted below: Energy Stability Analysis -- §69. Heated and Salted below: Generalized Energy Analysis -- Addendum for Chapter IX: Generalized Energy Theory of Stability for Hydromagnetic Flows -- X. Two-Sided Bifurcation into Convection -- § 70. The DOB Equations for Convention of a Fluid in a Container of Porous Material -- § 71. The Spectral Problem, the Adjoint Spectral Problem and the Energy Theory of Stability -- § 72. Two-Sided Bifurcation -- § 73. Conditions for the Existence of Two-Sided Bifurcation -- § 74. Two-Sided Bifurcation between Spherical Shells -- § 75. Stability of the Conduction Solution in a Container Heated below and Internally -- § 76. Taylor Series in Two Parameters -- § 77. Two-Sided Bifurcationin a Laterally Unbounded Layer of Fluid -- Addendum to Chapter X: Bifurcation Theory for Multiple Eigenvalues --  
505 0 |a § 90. An Improved Variational Theory Which Makes Use of the Fact that B is Small -- § 91. Numerical Computation of the Single-? and Two-? Solution. Remarks about the Asymptotic Limit ? ? ? -- § 92. The Heat Transport Curve: Comparison of Theory and Experiment -- XIII. Stability Problems for Viscoelastic Fluids -- § 93. Incompressible Simple Fluids. Functional Expansions and Stability -- §94. Stability and Bifurcation of the Rest State -- §95. Stability of Motions of a Viscoelastic Fluid -- XIV. Interfacial Stability -- § 96. The Mechanical Energy Equation for the Two Fluid System -- § 97. Stability of the Interface between Motionless Fluids When the Contact Line is Fixed -- § 98. Stability of a Column of Liquid Resting on a Columnof Air in a Vertical Tube—Static Analysis -- § 99. Stability of a Column of Liquid Resting on a Column of Air in a Vertical Tube—Dynamic Analysis -- Notes for Chapter XIV -- References 
505 0 |a XI. Stability of Supercritical Convection-Wave Number Selection Through Stability -- § 78. Statistically Stationary Convection and Steady Convection -- § 79. Stability of Rolls to Noninteracting Three-Dimensional Disturbances -- § 80. Nonlinear Neutral Curves for Three-Dimensional Disturbances of Roll Convection -- §81. Computation of Stability Boundaries by Numerical Methods -- §82. The Amplitude Equation of Newell and Whitehead -- XII. The Variational Theory of Turbulence Applied to Convection in Porous Materials Heated from below -- § 83. Bounds on the Heat Transported by Convection -- § 84. The Form of the Admissible Solenoidal Fluctuation Field Which Minimizes ? [u, ?; ?] -- §85. Mathematical Properties of the Multi-? Solutions -- § 86. The single-? Solution and the Situation for Small ? -- §87. Boundary Layers of the Single-? Solution -- §88. The Two-? Solution -- §89. Boundary-Layers of the Multi-? Solutions --  
505 0 |a VIII. The Oberbeck-Boussinesq Equations. The Stability of Constant Gradient Solutions of the Oberbeck-Boussinesq Equations -- § 54. The Oberbeck-Boussinesq Equations for the Basic Flow -- § 55. Boundary Conditions -- § 56. Equations Governing Disturbances of Solutions of the OB Equations -- §57. The ? Family of Energy Equations -- § 58. Kinematic Admissibility, Sufficient Conditions for Stability -- §59. Motionless Solutions of the Oberbeck-Boussinesq Equations -- § 60. Physical Mechanisms of Instability of the Motionless State -- § 61. Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for Stability -- § 62. The Bénard Problem -- § 63. Plane Couette Flow Heated from below -- § 64. The Buoyancy Boundary Layer -- IX. Global Stability of Constant Temperature-Gradient and Concentration-Gradient States of a Motionless Heterogeneous Fluid -- § 65. Mechanics of the Instability of the Conduction-Diffusion Solutions in a Motionless Heterogeneous Fluid --  
653 |a Physics and Astronomy 
653 |a Physics 
653 |a Mathematics 
653 |a Astronomy 
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520 |a The study of stability aims at understanding the abrupt changes which are observed in fluid motions as the external parameters are varied. It is a demanding study, far from full grown, whose most interesting conclusions are recent. I have written a detailed account of those parts of the recent theory which I regard as established. Acknowledgements I started writing this book in 1967 at the invitation of Clifford Truesdell. It was to be a short work on the energy theory of stability and if I had stuck to that I would have finished the writing many years ago. The theory of stability has developed so rapidly since 1967 that the book I might then have written would now have a much too limited scope. I am grateful to Truesdell, not so much for the invitation to spend endless hours of writing and erasing, but for the generous way he has supported my efforts and encouraged me to higher standards of good work. I have tried to follow Truesdell's advice to write this work in a clear and uncomplicated style. This is not easy advice for a former sociologist to follow; if I have failed it is not due to a lack of urging by him or trying by me. My research during the years 1969-1970 was supported in part by a grant from the Guggenheim foundation to study in London