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We here attempt to give a complete but concise treatment of the
theory of steady viscometric flows of simple (non-Newtonian) fluids
and to use that theory to discuss the design and interpretation of
ex periments. We are able to present the theory with less
mathematical machinery than was used in our original papers, partly
because this Tract has more limited aims than those papers, and
partly because we employ a method, found by Noll and published here
for the first time, for dealing with visco metric flows without the
apparatus of rela tive Cauchy-Green tensors and reduced
constitutive equations. To make the theory accessible to students
not familiar with modern mathematics, we have added to our Tract an
appendix explaining some of the mathe matical concepts essential to
continuum physics. Pittsburgh, July 1965 BERNARD D. COLEMAN HERSHEL
MARKOVITZ WALTER NOLL CONTENTS I. Introduction page 1. Limitations
of the Classical Theory of Navier and Stokes. 1 5 2. Incompressible
Simple Fluids. . . . . . . . . . . . 3. Plan and Scope of this
Monograph . . . . . . . . . 7 II. Theory of Incompressible Simple
Fluids 4. Kinematics. . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5. The Dynamical
Equations . . . . . . . . . . . 12 6. The Principle of Material
Objectivity . . . . . . 14 7. The Definition of an Incompressible
Simple Fluid . 17 8. Static Behavior of Simple Fluids . . . . . . .
. 19 III. General Theory of Viscometric Flows 9. The Kinematics of
Simple Shearing Flow 21 10. The Viscometric Functions . . . . . . .
. . . 22 11. The Dynamics of Simple Shearing Flow; Viscosity 26 12.
The Definition of a Viscometric Flow 29 13. Curvilineal Flows. . .
. . . . . 30 1. Kinematical Description . . . .
The 39 papers in this collection are devoted mostly to the exact
mathematical analysis of problems in continuum mechanics, but also
to problems of a purely mathematical nature mainly connected to
partial differential equations from continuum physics. All the
papers are dedicated to J. Serrin and were originally published in
the "Archive of Rational Mechanics and Analysis."
This volume collects papers dedicated toWalterNoll on his sixtieth
birthday, January 7, 1985. They first appeared in Volumes 86-97
(1984-1987) of the Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis. At
the request ofthe Editors the list of authors to be invited was
drawn up by B.D. Coleman, M. Feinberg, and J. Serrin. WalterNoll's
influence upon research into the foundations of mechanics and
thermodynamics is plain, everywhere acknowledged. Less obvious is
the wide effect his writings have exerted upon those who apply
mechanics to special problems, but it is witnessed by the now
frequent use of terms, concepts, and styles of argument he
introduced, use sometimes by young engineers who have learnt them
in some recent textbook and hence take them for granted, oftenwith
no idea whence they come. Examples are "objectivity", "material
frame- indifference", "constitutive equation", "reduced form" of
the last-named, "sim- plematerial", "simplesolid", "simplefluid",
"isotropygroup",andtheassociated notations and lines of reasoning.
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