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fluid dynamics In physics and engineering, fluid dynamics is a subdiscipline of fluid mechanics that describes the flow of fluids— liquids and gases. It has several subdisciplines, including ''aerodynamics'' (the study of air and other gases in motion) an ...
, Landau–Squire jet or Submerged Landau jet describes a round submerged jet issued from a point source of momentum into an infinite fluid medium of the same kind. This is an exact solution to the incompressible form of the Navier-Stokes equations, which was first discovered by
Lev Landau Lev Davidovich Landau (russian: Лев Дави́дович Ланда́у; 22 January 1908 – 1 April 1968) was a Soviet- Azerbaijani physicist of Jewish descent who made fundamental contributions to many areas of theoretical physics. His a ...
in 1944 and later by
Herbert Squire Herbert Brian Squire FRS (13 July 1909 – 22 November 1961), was a British aerospace engineer and Zaharoff Professor of Aviation at Imperial College London. Biography Born on 13 July 1909, Squire was educated at Bedford School and at Ballio ...
in 1951. The self-similar equation was in fact first derived by N. A. Slezkin in 1934, but never applied to the jet. Following Landau's work, V. I. Yatseyev obtained the general solution of the equation in 1950.


Mathematical description

The problem is described in
spherical coordinates In mathematics, a spherical coordinate system is a coordinate system for three-dimensional space where the position of a point is specified by three numbers: the ''radial distance'' of that point from a fixed origin, its ''polar angle'' measu ...
(r,\theta,\phi) with velocity components (u,v,0). The flow is axisymmetric, i.e., independent of \phi. Then the continuity equation and the incompressible
Navier–Stokes equations In physics, the Navier–Stokes equations ( ) are partial differential equations which describe the motion of viscous fluid substances, named after French engineer and physicist Claude-Louis Navier and Anglo-Irish physicist and mathematician Geo ...
reduce to : \begin & \frac \frac(r^2u) + \frac\frac(v\sin\theta) = 0 \\ pt& u\frac + \frac \frac - \frac= - \frac \frac + \nu \left(\nabla^2 u - \frac - \frac \frac - \frac \right) \\ pt& u\frac + \frac\frac + \frac = -\frac \frac + \nu \left(\nabla^2 v + \frac\frac - \frac\right) \end where :\nabla^2 = \frac \frac\left(r^2 \frac\right) + \frac\frac\left(\sin\theta\frac\right). A self-similar description is available for the solution in the following form, :u = \frac f'(\theta),\quad v = -\frac f(\theta). Substituting the above self-similar form into the governing equations and using the boundary conditions u=v=p-p_\infty=0 at infinity, one finds the form for pressure as :\frac = -\frac + \frac + \frac where c_1 is a constant. Using this pressure, we find again from the momentum equation, :-\frac + \frac \frac = \frac \left u + \frac \frac \left(\sin\theta\frac\right)\right+ \frac. Replacing \theta by \mu=\cos\theta as independent variable, the velocities become : u = -\frac f'(\mu),\quad v = -\frac \frac (for brevity, the same symbol is used for f(\theta) and f(\mu) even though they are functionally the same, but takes different numerical values) and the equation becomes :f'^2 + ff'' = 2f' + 1-\mu^2)f'' - 2c_1. After two integrations, the equation reduces to :f^2 = 4\mu f + 2(1-\mu^2) f' - 2(c_1\mu^2 + c_2 \mu + c_3), where c_2 and c_3 are constants of integration. The above equation is a
Riccati equation In mathematics, a Riccati equation in the narrowest sense is any first-order ordinary differential equation that is quadratic in the unknown function. In other words, it is an equation of the form : y'(x) = q_0(x) + q_1(x) \, y(x) + q_2(x) \, y^2(x ...
. After some calculation, the general solution can be shown to be :f = \alpha(1+\mu) + \beta(1-\mu) + \frac\left - \int_1^\mu \frac\right, where \alpha,\ \beta,\ c are constants. The physically relevant solution to the jet corresponds to the case \alpha=\beta=0 (Equivalently, we say that c_1=c_2=c_3=0, so that the solution is free from singularities on the axis of symmetry, except at the origin).Batchelor, G. K. (2000). An introduction to fluid dynamics. Cambridge university press. Therefore, :f = \frac = \frac. The function f is related to the
stream function The stream function is defined for incompressible flow, incompressible (divergence-free) fluid flow, flows in two dimensions – as well as in three dimensions with axisymmetry. The flow velocity components can be expressed as the derivatives of t ...
as \psi = \nu r f, thus contours of f for different values of c provides the streamlines. The constant c describes the force at the origin acting in the direction of the jet (this force is equal to the rate of momentum transfer across any sphere around the origin plus the force in the jet direction exerted by the sphere due to pressure and viscous forces), the exact relation between the force and the constant is given by :\frac = \frac + 8(c+1) - 4(c+1)^2\ln \frac . The solution describes a jet of fluid moving away from the origin rapidly and entraining the slowly moving fluid outside of the jet. The edge of the jet can be defined as the location where the streamlines are at minimum distance from the axis, i.e.,e the edge is given by :\theta_o = \cos^ \left(\frac\right). Therefore, the force can be expressed alternatively using this semi-angle of the conical-boundary of the jet, :\frac = \frac\frac +\frac \ln \frac + \frac.


Limiting behaviors

When the force becomes large, the semi-angle of the jet becomes small, in which case, :\frac \sim \frac \ll 1 and the solution inside and outside of the jet become :\begin f(\theta)&\sim \frac,\quad \theta<\theta_o,\\ f(\theta)&\sim 2(1+\cos\theta),\quad \theta>\theta_o. \end The jet in this limiting case is called the
Schlichting jet Schlichting jet is a steady, laminar, round jet, emerging into a stationary fluid of the same kind with very high Reynolds number. The problem was formulated and solved by Hermann Schlichting in 1933, who also formulated the corresponding planar Bi ...
. On the other extreme, when the force is small, :\frac \sim \frac\gg 1 the semi-angle approaches 90 degree (no inside and outside region, the whole domain is considered as single region), the solution itself goes to :f(\theta)\sim\frac\sin^2\theta.


See also

*
Schlichting jet Schlichting jet is a steady, laminar, round jet, emerging into a stationary fluid of the same kind with very high Reynolds number. The problem was formulated and solved by Hermann Schlichting in 1933, who also formulated the corresponding planar Bi ...
*
Schneider flow Schneider flow describes the axisymmetric outer flow induced by a laminar or turbulent jet having a large jet Reynolds number or by a laminar plume with a large Grashof number, in the case where the fluid domain is bounded by a wall. When the jet R ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Landau-Squire jet Flow regimes Fluid dynamics Lev Landau