Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 INTRODUCTION AND PRELIMINARIES
- 2 LINEAR INTERNAL WAVES
- 3 FINITE AMPLITUDE MOTIONS IN STABLY STRATIFIED FLUIDS
- 4 INSTABILITY AND THE PRODUCTION OF TURBULENCE
- 5 TURBULENT SHEAR FLOWS IN A STRATIFIED FLUID
- 6 BUOYANT CONVECTION FROM ISOLATED SOURCES
- 7 CONVECTION FROM HEATED SURFACES
- 8 DOUBLE-DIFFUSIVE CONVECTION
- 9 MIXING ACROSS DENSITY INTERFACES
- 10 INTERNAL MIXING PROCESSES
- Bibliography and Author Index
- Recent Publications
- Subject Index
- Plate section
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 INTRODUCTION AND PRELIMINARIES
- 2 LINEAR INTERNAL WAVES
- 3 FINITE AMPLITUDE MOTIONS IN STABLY STRATIFIED FLUIDS
- 4 INSTABILITY AND THE PRODUCTION OF TURBULENCE
- 5 TURBULENT SHEAR FLOWS IN A STRATIFIED FLUID
- 6 BUOYANT CONVECTION FROM ISOLATED SOURCES
- 7 CONVECTION FROM HEATED SURFACES
- 8 DOUBLE-DIFFUSIVE CONVECTION
- 9 MIXING ACROSS DENSITY INTERFACES
- 10 INTERNAL MIXING PROCESSES
- Bibliography and Author Index
- Recent Publications
- Subject Index
- Plate section
Summary
Buoyancy forces arise as a result of variations of density in a fluid subject to gravity, and produce a wide range of phenomena of importance in many branches of fluid mechanics. Progress in this field has been made largely through the desire to solve very practical problems, arising for instance in meteorology or in hydraulic engineering. This emphasis on particular applications has meant that parallel developments have often been made in different disciplines without much cross reference to related work, and some results, well understood in one context, are less familiar in another where they might be used to advantage. In this book I have attempted to write a coherent account of the various fluid motions which can be driven or influenced by the presence of small density differences. It is intended as a general introduction to the subject and its literature, in which the physical understanding of the phenomena is emphasized, rather than the applications on the one hand or detailed mathematical theory on the other.
The selection of subject matter must always be a personal one, however, and my own research interests have certainly influenced the topics chosen and the amount of space given to each of them. I have worked with laboratory models of small scale processes in the ocean and atmosphere, and so laboratory and geophysical examples come most readily to mind, but comparisons have also been made with results from various fields of engineering where possible.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Buoyancy Effects in Fluids , pp. xiii - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1973
- 1
- Cited by