Three-dimensional theory of water impact. Part 1. Inverse Wagner problem
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2744298
DOI10.1017/S002211200100475XzbMath1014.76007OpenAlexW2169412192MaRDI QIDQ2744298
Yves-Marie Scolan, Alexander A. Korobkin
Publication date: 19 September 2001
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/s002211200100475x
analytical solutionsinverse methodideal incompressible fluidelliptic paraboloidblunt-body water impactelliptic contact linethree-dimensional Wagner problem
Related Items (max. 100)
Inertio-capillary rebound of a droplet impacting a fluid bath ⋮ On the fully nonlinear water entry of a cone in Stokes wave ⋮ Early-time jet formation in liquid–liquid impact problems: theory and simulations ⋮ Gravity effects in two-dimensional and axisymmetric water impact models ⋮ Numerical study on the water entry of two-dimensional airfoils by BEM ⋮ Water entry of an elastic conical shell ⋮ Skimming impacts and rebounds of smoothly shaped bodies on shallow liquid layers ⋮ A semi-analytical solution for the three-dimensional Wagner steep wave impact on a vertical circular cylinder ⋮ Local slamming impact of sandwich composite hulls ⋮ Pressure impulse theory for a slamming wave on a vertical circular cylinder ⋮ Starting flow generated by the impulsive start of a floating wedge ⋮ Non-wetting impact of a sphere onto a bath and its application to bouncing droplets ⋮ Droplet impact onto a spring-supported plate: analysis and simulations ⋮ Droplet impact onto an elastic plate: a new mechanism for splashing ⋮ The controlled vertical impact of an inclined flat plate on a quiescent water surface ⋮ Fully nonlinear investigation on water entry of a rigid paraboloid ⋮ Three-dimensional oblique water-entry problems at small deadrise angles ⋮ On wedge-slamming pressures ⋮ A 3D SPH-based entirely Lagrangian meshfree hydroelastic FSI solver for anisotropic composite structures
This page was built for publication: Three-dimensional theory of water impact. Part 1. Inverse Wagner problem