DOI10.1017/S0022112081002632zbMath0451.76015OpenAlexW1989977039MaRDI QIDQ3898196
Stanley Richardson
Publication date: 1981
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022112081002632
Hele-Shaw flows with a free boundary produced by multipoles,
On the breakup of air bubbles in a Hele-Shaw cell,
A generalized moment representation of two free boundary problems,
Flow and passive transport in planar multipolar flows,
Unnamed Item,
Hele–Shaw flows with time-dependent free boundaries in which the fluid occupies a multiply-connected region,
Two-dimensional slow viscous flows with time-dependent free boundaries driven by surface tension,
Complex variable methods in Hele–Shaw moving boundary problems,
Hele Shaw Flows with Time-Dependent Free Boundaries Involving Injection Through Slits,
Computation of Hele-Shaw free boundary problems near obstacles,
The Hele-Shaw injection problem for an extremely shear-thinning fluid,
Some geometrical properties of free boundaries in the Hele-Shaw flows,
On nonlinear interface dynamics in Hele-Shaw flows,
The Mathematical Theories of Diffusion: Nonlinear and Fractional Diffusion,
On the oil-water boundary.,
Inverse problems of potential theory and flows in porous media with time- dependent free boundary,
Non-newtonian Hele-Shaw flows in n ⩾2 dimensions,
Hele-Shaw type flows in Rn,
Integral results for nonlinear diffusion equations,
Squeeze flow of multiply-connected fluid domains in a Hele-Shaw cell,
Universal statistics of point vortex turbulence,
Coefficient inequalities related with typically real functions,
Hele–Shaw flows with free boundaries driven along infinite strips by a pressure difference,
Partial regularity for doubly nonlinear parabolic systems of the first type,
Generalised Hele-Shaw flow: A Schwarz function approach,
New exact solutions for Hele-Shaw flow in doubly connected regions,
Hele–Shaw flows with a free boundary produced by multipoles,
Some exact solutions of the thin-sheet stamping problem,
A stable self-similar singularity of evaporating drops: ellipsoidal collapse to a point