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Lift of a Rotating Cylinder in Inviscid Flow |
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| May11-12, 03:21 PM | #1 |
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Lift of a Rotating Cylinder in Inviscid Flow
Hi
I am wondering why a spinning cylinder will produce lift in an inviscid flow. From: http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/airplane/cyl.html one of the mechanisms for lift generation was the sticking of fluid particles to the wall of the cylinder. I thought that the no slip condition only applies to viscous fluids so if the fluid was inviscid I don't see how lift can be generated. However, in the simulations in the link, the flow was simulated inviscid yet there is lift, why is this? Thanks |
| May12-12, 09:47 PM | #2 |
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In a truly inviscid flow it won't. When one analyzes a rotating cylinder with potential flow, one is essentially approximating the effect of viscosity through the use of a point vortex.
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| May15-12, 11:40 PM | #3 |
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Thanks for the response. Can you briefly describe what point vortex are? I was never introduced this. And just to confirm, in the NASA simulation at http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/airplane/cyl.html they state Thanks very much |
| May16-12, 08:34 AM | #4 |
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Lift of a Rotating Cylinder in Inviscid Flow
You essentially insert manually the fluid rotation that viscosity would have caused. This breaks the symmetry of the flow, making flow on one side of the cylinder faster than the flow on the other one. Velocity is linked to pressure, which is what creates your lift.
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