Inviscid and viscous stationary waves of gas flow through contracting-expanding nozzles (Q1046476): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Added link to MaRDI item. |
Removed claim: reviewed by (P1447): Item:Q590145 |
||
Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Alexey O. Remizov / rank | |||
Revision as of 13:04, 16 February 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Inviscid and viscous stationary waves of gas flow through contracting-expanding nozzles |
scientific article |
Statements
Inviscid and viscous stationary waves of gas flow through contracting-expanding nozzles (English)
0 references
22 December 2009
0 references
The authors consider the following model for viscous isentropic compressible flows through a contracting-expanding nozzle: \[ (a\rho)_t + (a\rho u)_x = 0, \quad (a\rho u)_t + (a\rho u^2)_x + a(P(\rho))_x = \epsilon (a u_x)_x, \tag{1} \] where \(\rho\), \(u\), \(P\), \(\epsilon > 0\) and \(a=a(x)\) are the density, velocity, pressure, viscosity coefficient of the gas and the area of the cross section at \(x\) of the rotationally symmetric tube of the nozzle. Here, \(P(0)=0\), \(P'(\rho)>0\), \(P''(\rho) \geq 0\) for all \(\rho > 0\); \(a(x)\to a_{\pm}\), \(a_x(x)\to 0\) as \(x \to \pm \infty\); \(a_x(x)< 0\) for \(x<0\); \(a_x(x)> 0\) for \(x>0\). The authors examine the steady-state problem of system (1) from the viewpoint of dynamical systems, which can be treated as a singularly perturbed system with viscosity coefficient \(\epsilon\) as a small parameter. Detailed analysis for the limit slow and fast systems are carried out for general \(a(x)\). Singular orbits are constructed for a special type of \(a(x)\). The main results on a classification of the inviscid steady-states and the existence of their viscous profiles are then established by applying the geometric singular perturbation method.
0 references
gas flow
0 references
contracting-expanding nozzles
0 references
singularly perturbed systems
0 references
steady-states
0 references
standing waves
0 references
standing shocks
0 references
sub-to-super transonic waves
0 references