The Momentum Equations in Flux Form

Ross Bannister, April 2001

Note the momentum equations,

equation

and the continuity equation,

equation

equation

equation

equation

where the Lagrangian derivative has been used in the last line. We shall concentrate on rewriting the left hand side of Eqs. (1) under special conditions. If the fluid is incompressible (), then Eq. (3) says that the fluid flow is nondivergent, and we can write the left hand side of Eqs. (1) in their so-called flux form.

This is easiest to see if we treat each momentum component separately. Demonstrating this with the -component,

equation

Note the following expansion,

equation

equation

The last line is true under incompressible circumstances. Eq. (5) can be used to express Eq. (4) as the following,

equation

which is the -momentum equation in flux form. Similarly for the - and -components of the momentum Eqs. (1),

equation

equation

It is not immediately clear to see how to express the three components in a compressed form, analogous to Eqs. (1). To do this we use the tensor product which yields a matrix as demonstrated by the following,

equation

This is contrasted to the scalar product, . The momentum Eqs. (1) can be written in flux form using the tensor product,

equation

from which the three components Eqs. (6), (7) and (8) can be recovered by considering the respective columns of Eq. (10) in turn. The tensor product, Eq. (9) is implied whenever two vectors are written side-by-side.



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