This widely used fluid mechanics film series, which was produced at
IIHR under the direction of Hunter Rouse, now is available on video
cassette tapes. The six films
have been reproduced on two 90-minute cassettes and are available only in
complete sets, in a variety of formats, for $200. (Please see the
order form for specific information)
There are 6 digitized movies available for download. The files are in MPEG format, and are ~ 300 MB each, so download times may be long.
- Designed
to orient engineering students, this video shows examples of flow
phenomena from a host of everyday experiences. Empirical solutions by means of scale models are illustrated.
The significance of the Euler, Froude, Reynolds, and Mach numbers
as similitude parameters is illustrated.
- Second
in the series, this video departs from the essential generality of the
first by explicitly illustrating, through experiment and animation, the
basic concepts and physical relationships that are involved in the
analysis of fluid motion. The concepts of velocity, acceleration,
circulation and vorticity are introduced, and the use of integral
equations of motion is demonstrated by a simple example.
-
The
fourth video deals with the effect of viscosity. Dye, smoke, suspended particles and hydrogen-bubbles are used
to reveal the velocity field.
-
Various
combinations of Couette and plane Poiseuille flow introduce the principles
of lubrication. Axisymmetric
Poiseuille flow and development of the flow around an elliptic cylinder
are related to variation in the Reynolds number, and the growth of the
boundary layer along a flat plate is shown.
-
Instability
in boundary layers and pipe flow is shown to lead to turbulence. The eddy viscosity and apparent stress are introduced by
hotwire-anemometer indications. The
processes of turbulence production, turbulent mixing, and turbulence decay
are considered.
- In this third video of the series, which proceeds from
the introductory and the basic material presented in the first two
videos, emphasis is laid upon the action of gravity. Principles of wave propagation are illustrated, including aspects
of generation, celerity, reflection, stability, and reduction to
steadiness by relative motion. Simulation
of comparable phenomena in the atmosphere and the ocean is considered.
- In
the fifth video of the series, emphasis is laid upon the role of
boundary-layer separation in modifying the flow pattern and producing
longitudinal and lateral components of force on a moving body. Various
conditions of separation and methods of separation control are first
illustrated. Attention is then given to the distribution of pressure
around typical body profiles and its relation to the resulting drag.
The concept of circulation introduced in the second film is
developed to explain the forces on rotating bodies and the forced
vibration of cylindrical bodies. Structural failure of unstable sections is demonstrated.
-
The
last in the six-video series makes extensive use of the analogy between
gravity and sound waves and illustrates, through laboratory demonstrations
and animation, the concepts of wave celerity, shock waves and surges,
wave reflection and water hammer.
-
Two-dimensional waves are produced by flow past a
point source at various speeds relative to the wave celerity to
illustrate the effect of changing Mach number, and the principle is
applied to flow at curved and abrupt wall deflections. Axisymmetric and
three-dimensional wave patterns are then portrayed using color Schlieren
pictures.
Printable ORDER FORM (PDF,7KB)
(MS Word)
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