Two-dimensional bubbles in slow viscous flows
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Publication:5545425
Cited in
(28)- Two-dimensional slow viscous flows with time-dependent free boundaries driven by surface tension
- A cut finite element method for incompressible two-phase Navier-Stokes flows
- Free surface deformation due to a source or a sink in Stokes flow
- Flows with a moving contact line
- Free-surface cusps associated with flow at low Reynolds number
- Flows satisfying mixed no-slip and no-shear conditions
- Quasi-steady deformation of a two-dimensional bubble placed within a potential viscous flow
- A note on plane Stokes flow past a shear free impermeable cylinder
- Stencil adaptive diffuse interface method for simulation of two-dimensional incompressible multiphase flows
- Plane Stokes flow driven by capillarity on a free surface
- Geometry of self-propulsion at low Reynolds number
- Quaternionic functions and their applications in a viscous fluid flow
- Emulsion droplet deformation and breakup with lattice Boltzmann model
- Swelling instability of surface-attached gels as a model of soft tissue growth under geometric constraints
- A numerical method for two phase flows with insoluble surfactants
- Equilibrium tilt of slippery elliptical rods in creeping simple shear
- Bianalytic stress-flow function in planar quasistationary problems of capillary hydrodynamics
- A spectral boundary element algorithm for interfacial dynamics in two-dimensional Stokes flow based on Hermitian interfacial smoothing
- An efficient numerical method for studying interfacial motion in two-dimensional creeping flows
- Formation of cusp on the free surface at low Reynolds number flow
- Coalescence of liquid drops: different models versus experiment
- Steady solutions for bubbles in dipole-driven Stokes flows
- Formation of a pointed drop in Taylor's four-roller mill
- Free surface deformation due to a source and a sink of equal strength in Stokes flow
- Effect of surfactants on the deformation of drops and bubbles in Navier-Stokes flow
- Free-surface deformation due to spiral flow owing to a source/sink and a vortex in Stokes flow
- Slip-plane and slip-cylinder theorems for slow viscous flow
- On the transition to dripping of an inverted liquid film
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