Fluid flow past a cylinder

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"The flow of an incompressible fluid past a cylinder is one of the first mathematical models that a student of fluid dynamics encounters. This flow is an excellent vehicle for the study of concepts that will be encountered numerous times in mathematical physics, such as vector fields, coordinate transformations, and most important, the physical interpretation of mathematical results." [1]

Mathematical Solution

PD Image
Colors: pressure field. Red is high and blue is low. Velocity vectors.

A cylinder (or disk) of radius is placed in two-dimensional, incompressible, inviscid flow. The goal is to find the velocity vector and pressure in a plane, subject to the condition that far from the cylinder the velocity vector is

and at the boundary of the cylinder

where is vector normal to the cylinder surface.

PD Image
Close-up view of one quadrant of the flow. Colors: pressure field. Red is high and blue is low. Velocity vectors.
Pressure field (colors), streamfunction (black), velocity potential (white).