Fluid Mechanics question (shear stress)

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the shear stress in a fluid mechanics problem involving two cylinders. Participants question the negative shear stress values derived from the derivative, which resembles ln(1/x). Clarification is sought on the choice of the a/b ratio of 0.8, which serves as an example for analyzing velocity distribution between the cylinders. The use of r/b is explained as a method for better result interpretation, indicating positions relative to the inner and outer cylinders. Overall, the conversation highlights confusion over the mathematical expressions and their implications in the context of fluid mechanics.
teknodude
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The problem and solutions is here

http://img206.imageshack.us/img206/6093/problem1rm4.th.png

Isn't the shear stress for both the inner and outer negative? When i take the derivative i get negative. The derivative is basically ln ( 1/x) since the rest are just constants.

Edit: I meant that the expression looks similar to ln (1/x).

Also I am clueless to how they got the values for that the velocity destribution graph. They picked a/b = 0.8 and i believe the # has to be less than 1 or the Vz equation is undefined.
 
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Remeber ln (1/x) = ln (x-1) = - ln x or

ln (a/b) = -ln (b/a).


Also, if one opens a spreadsheet, enters x = 0.8 . . . 1.0, by .01, and then plots 1/x vs x, one will see that it looks almost straight.

The solution indicates that the plot is almost linear. The radial dimension has been normalized to b, by using r/b for the abscissa.
 
thanks Astronuc, but i still got a few questions.

Why did they do a/b? Is it because the problem wants to know the ratio of velocity distribution between the two cylinders?

Also where did r/b come from? The only way i see it is that they substituted ln (b/r) with -ln (r/b), but why?
 
Either I'm very tired and can't think, or this solution has a serious problem with negative signes everywhere.

A ratio of a/b=0.8 was picked just as an example for a gap.

Using r/b is just a better choice when it comes to interpreting results. When the ratio is 0.8, you're at the inner cylinder (since the smaller cylinder is defined as a/b=0.8), when it's 1, you're at the outer.
 
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