|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Fluid dynamics is an ancient science incredibly alive today. Modern
technol ogy and new needs require a deeper knowledge of the
behavior of real fluids, and new discoveries or steps forward pose,
quite often, challenging and diffi cult new mathematical {::
oblems. In this framework, a special role is played by
incompressible nonviscous (sometimes called perfect) flows. This is
a mathematical model consisting essentially of an evolution
equation (the Euler equation) for the velocity field of fluids.
Such an equation, which is nothing other than the Newton laws plus
some additional structural hypo theses, was discovered by Euler in
1755, and although it is more than two centuries old, many
fundamental questions concerning its solutions are still open. In
particular, it is not known whether the solutions, for reasonably
general initial conditions, develop singularities in a finite time,
and very little is known about the long-term behavior of smooth
solutions. These and other basic problems are still open, and this
is one of the reasons why the mathe matical theory of perfect flows
is far from being completed. Incompressible flows have been
attached, by many distinguished mathe maticians, with a large
variety of mathematical techniques so that, today, this field
constitutes a very rich and stimulating part of applied
mathematics."
In this monograph we present a review of a number of recent results
on the motion of a classical body immersed in an infinitely
extended medium and subjected to the action of an external force.
We investigate this topic in the framework of mathematical physics
by focusing mainly on the class of purely Hamiltonian systems, for
which very few results are available. We discuss two cases: when
the medium is a gas and when it is a fluid. In the first case, the
aim is to obtain microscopic models of viscous friction. In the
second, we seek to underline some non-trivial features of the
motion. Far from giving a general survey on the subject, which is
very rich and complex from both a phenomenological and theoretical
point of view, we focus on some fairly simple models that can be
studied rigorously, thus providing a first step towards a
mathematical description of viscous friction. In some cases, we
restrict ourselves to studying the problem at a heuristic level, or
we present the main ideas, discussing only some aspects of the
proof if it is prohibitively technical. This book is principally
addressed to researchers or PhD students who are interested in this
or related fields of mathematical physics.
Fluid dynamics is an ancient science incredibly alive today. Modern
technol ogy and new needs require a deeper knowledge of the
behavior of real fluids, and new discoveries or steps forward pose,
quite often, challenging and diffi cult new mathematical {::
oblems. In this framework, a special role is played by
incompressible nonviscous (sometimes called perfect) flows. This is
a mathematical model consisting essentially of an evolution
equation (the Euler equation) for the velocity field of fluids.
Such an equation, which is nothing other than the Newton laws plus
some additional structural hypo theses, was discovered by Euler in
1755, and although it is more than two centuries old, many
fundamental questions concerning its solutions are still open. In
particular, it is not known whether the solutions, for reasonably
general initial conditions, develop singularities in a finite time,
and very little is known about the long-term behavior of smooth
solutions. These and other basic problems are still open, and this
is one of the reasons why the mathe matical theory of perfect flows
is far from being completed. Incompressible flows have been
attached, by many distinguished mathe maticians, with a large
variety of mathematical techniques so that, today, this field
constitutes a very rich and stimulating part of applied
mathematics."
The International Society for the Interaction of Mechanics and
Mathematics has a long-standing and respected tradition of hosting
symposia that provide a forum for disseminating new developments
and methods. Trends in Applications of Mathematics to Mechanics
represents the proceedings of the eleventh such symposium, held at
the University of Nice in May 1998.
Comprising invited lectures and refereed papers, this volume
includes recent results that open perspectives on fields in
mechanics and their methodological counterparts in mathematics. It
also surveys important advances in the areas where mathematics and
mechanics interact. The applications addressed include:
|
|