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  • Gebundenes Buch

This is Part 4 of a book series on fluid dynamics which is devoted to hydrodynamic stability theory. This theory aims at predicting the conditions under which a flow which is smooth and regular (a so-called laminar flow) undergoes a transition to a more complicated and apparently erratic state known as turbulence.

Produktbeschreibung
This is Part 4 of a book series on fluid dynamics which is devoted to hydrodynamic stability theory. This theory aims at predicting the conditions under which a flow which is smooth and regular (a so-called laminar flow) undergoes a transition to a more complicated and apparently erratic state known as turbulence.
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Autorenporträt
Anatoly I. Ruban is Professor and Chair in Applied Mathematics and Mathematical Physics at the Imperial College London. He was formerly Professor of Computational Fluid Dynamics in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Manchester, from 1995 to 2008. In 1991 he received the Doctor of Science degree in Physics and Mathematics. In Moscow, he served as Head of the Gas Dynamics Department in the Central Aerohydrodynamics Institute in Moscow from 1978-1995 after earning his PhD in Fluid Mechanics in 1977. Jitesh S.B. Gajjar is currently Professor of Applied Mathematics at the University of Manchester. He obtained his undergraduate and PhD degrees from Imperial College (1977-1984), then worked as a Research Scientist at BMT Ltd before taking up a lecturing post at Exeter University in 1985. He moved to Manchester in 1991. His research expertise is in fluid mechanics and he has published extensively including co-authoring Fluid Dynamics vol. 1 with Anatoly Ruban. Andrew G. Walton is a Senior Lecturer in the Mathematics Department at Imperial College London. He graduated from University College London with First Class Degree in Mathematics and Astronomy and was awarded the Faculty Medal for the Physical Sciences. In 1989 he worked as a Research Scientist at Old Dominion University, Virginia, and NASA Langley Research Center, Virginia, before completing his PhD in Fluid Dynamics in the Mathematics Department at University College London under the supervision of Professor F. T. Smith FRS in 1991. He then worked as an Associate Research Assistant, including the role of Analyst/Programmer in the Mathematics Department at University College London, and was appointed Lecturer in the Mathematics Department at Imperial College London in 1992.