Fluids PDE Problem: Understanding the Elimination of c_1 in Boundary Condition

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The discussion focuses on a fluid dynamics problem involving the potential function $$\psi(r,\theta)$$ for 2D flow past a cylinder. The user questions why the constant $$c_1$$ is not eliminated in the boundary condition, despite the solution simplifying to include only the term involving $$U$$. It is noted that as $$r$$ becomes large, the logarithmic term grows slower than linear terms, which may justify its omission for boundary conditions. The user also seeks clarification on why a constant term does not appear in the solution, suggesting that the logarithmic term's growth is negligible compared to linear terms. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding boundary conditions in the context of fluid flow and potential functions.
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Hi PF!

So my book has boiled the problem down to $$\psi(r,\theta) = c_1 \ln \frac{r}{a}+\sum_{n=1}^\infty A_n\left(r^n-\frac{a^{2n}}{r^n}\right)\sin n\theta$$ subject to ##\psi \approx Ur\sin\theta## as ##r## get big. The book then writes
$$\psi(r,\theta) = c_1 \ln \frac{r}{a}+U\left(r-\frac{a^2}{r}\right) \sin \theta$$ I understand ##A_n=0\, \forall\, n \geq 2## and ##A_1=U## but why isn't ##c_1## eliminated too? To me it seems the natural log does not allow the "boundary condition" to be satisfied.
 
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Whats the context of the problem?
 
Fluid flow in 2D passing a cylinder of radius ##a##. The flow satisfies continuity, so ##\nabla \cdot \vec{v} = 0##. Define ##\psi \equiv \nabla \times \vec{v}## so that continuity is satisfied. Then ##v_x = \psi_y## and ##v_y=-\psi_x##. The resulting PDE is then ##\nabla^2 \psi = 0##. Solving this in polar coordinates yields the above solution I posted, the infinite series. In the far wake, velocity in the ##x## direction is constant ##U##, which suggests ##v_x = \psi_y = U \implies \psi = Uy## (I guess I don't understand why there is no constant too, which is to say why isn't this true: ##\psi = Uy + C_0(x)##).
 
Any ideas? My thought process is since ##r## grows much larger than ##\ln r## we may leave the natural logarithm? Can anyone confirm this?
 
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