Meinhard T. Schobeiri ...
504 pages
Publisher: Springer; (October 8, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 3642115934
ISBN-13: 978-3642115936
The contents of this book covers the material required in the Fluid
Mechanics Graduate Core Course (MEEN-621) and in Advanced Fluid
Mechanics, a Ph. D-level elective course (MEEN-622), both of which I
have been teaching at Texas A&M University for the past two decades.
While there are numerous undergraduate fluid mechanics texts on the
market for engineering students and instructors to choose from, there
are only limited texts that comprehensively address the particular needs
of graduate engineering fluid mechanics courses. To complement the
lecture materials, the instructors more often recommend several texts,
each of which treats special topics of fluid mechanics. This
circumstance and the need to have a textbook that covers the materials
needed in the above courses gave the impetus to provide the graduate
engineering community with a coherent textbook that comprehensively
addresses their needs for an advanced fluid mechanics text. Although
this text book is primarily aimed at mechanical engineering students, it
is equally suitable for aerospace engineering, civil engineering, other
engineering disciplines, and especially those practicing professionals
who perform CFD-simulation on a routine basis and would like to know
more about the underlying physics of the commercial codes they use.
Furthermore, it is suitable for self study, provided that the reader has
a sufficient knowledge of calculus and differential equations. In the
past, because of the lack of advanced computational capability, the
subject of fluid mechanics was artificially subdivided into inviscid,
viscous (laminar, turbulent), incompressible, compressible, subsonic,
supersonic and hypersonic flows.