Page:Aerial Flight - Volume 1 - Aerodynamics - Frederick Lanchester - 1906.djvu/32

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§ 10
AERODYNAMICS.

the points A and E may vary so long as the variations are gradual; change of pressure will accompany change of area on well-known hydrodynamic principles, but no net resistance is introduced; consequently the motion of the fluid through the pipe does not involve any energy expenditure whatever.

Let us now examine the forces exerted by the fluid on different portions of the pipe in its passage. The path of the particles of fluid in the length between the points A and B is such as denotes upward acceleration, and consequently the fluid here must be acted on by an upward force supplied by the walls of the pipe, and the reaction exerted by the fluid on the pipe is equal and opposite. A shorter way is to regard this reaction as the centrifugal component of the curvilinear path of the flow, and as such it may be indicated by arrows as in the figure. By assuming the bends in the pipe to be equal and a uniform velocity throughout, it follows that these centrifugal components exactly balance one another, each to each, and the pipe has no unbalanced force tending to push it in one direction or the other. The argument may be found presented in this form in White's "Naval Architecture." The same net result follows, no matter what the exact form of the bends, or whether or no the velocity is uniform, provided the bends are smooth and the cross-section (and therefore the velocity) is the same at E as at A, for under these circumstances the pressure at A will be the same as at E, the applied forces thus being balanced, and there will be no momentum communicated by the fluid in its passage.

When a streamline body travels through a fluid the lines of flow may be regarded as passing round it as if conveyed by a number of pipes as in Fig. 2. It is convenient, and it in nowise alters the problem, to look upon the body as stationary in an infinite stream of fluid (Fig. 3); we are then able to show clearly the lines of flow relatively to the surface of the body. Now let us take first the fluid stream that skirts the surface itself, and let us suppose this included between the walls of an imaginary pipe, then forces will be developed in a manner

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