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2.20 Marine Hydrodynamics (13.021) (MIT) 2.20 Marine Hydrodynamics (13.021) (MIT)
Description
In this course the fundamentals of fluid mechanics are developed in the context of naval architecture and ocean science and engineering. The various topics covered are: Transport theorem and conservation principles, Navier-Stokes' equation, dimensional analysis, ideal and potential flows, vorticity and Kelvin's theorem, hydrodynamic forces in potential flow, D'Alembert's paradox, added-mass, slender-body theory, viscous-fluid flow, laminar and turbulent boundary layers, model testing, scaling laws, application of potential theory to surface waves, energy transport, wave/body forces, linearized theory of lifting surfaces, and experimental project in the towing tank or propeller tunnel.This subject was originally offered in Course 13 (Department of Ocean Engineering) as 13.021. In 2005, In this course the fundamentals of fluid mechanics are developed in the context of naval architecture and ocean science and engineering. The various topics covered are: Transport theorem and conservation principles, Navier-Stokes' equation, dimensional analysis, ideal and potential flows, vorticity and Kelvin's theorem, hydrodynamic forces in potential flow, D'Alembert's paradox, added-mass, slender-body theory, viscous-fluid flow, laminar and turbulent boundary layers, model testing, scaling laws, application of potential theory to surface waves, energy transport, wave/body forces, linearized theory of lifting surfaces, and experimental project in the towing tank or propeller tunnel.This subject was originally offered in Course 13 (Department of Ocean Engineering) as 13.021. In 2005,Subjects
fundamentals of fluid mechanics | fundamentals of fluid mechanics | naval architecture | naval architecture | ocean science and engineering | ocean science and engineering | transport theorem | transport theorem | conservation principles | conservation principles | Navier-Stokes' equation | Navier-Stokes' equation | dimensional analysis | dimensional analysis | ideal and potential flows | ideal and potential flows | vorticity and Kelvin's theorem | vorticity and Kelvin's theorem | hydrodynamic forces in potential flow | hydrodynamic forces in potential flow | D'Alembert's paradox | D'Alembert's paradox | added-mass | added-mass | slender-body theory. Viscous-fluid flow | slender-body theory. Viscous-fluid flow | laminar and turbulent boundary layers | laminar and turbulent boundary layers | model testing | model testing | scaling laws | scaling laws | application of potential theory to surface waves | application of potential theory to surface waves | energy transport | energy transport | wave/body forces | wave/body forces | linearized theory of lifting surfaces | linearized theory of lifting surfaces | experimental project in the towing tank or propeller tunnel | experimental project in the towing tank or propeller tunnelLicense
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Description
In this course the fundamentals of fluid mechanics are developed in the context of naval architecture and ocean science and engineering. The various topics covered are: Transport theorem and conservation principles, Navier-Stokes' equation, dimensional analysis, ideal and potential flows, vorticity and Kelvin's theorem, hydrodynamic forces in potential flow, D'Alembert's paradox, added-mass, slender-body theory, viscous-fluid flow, laminar and turbulent boundary layers, model testing, scaling laws, application of potential theory to surface waves, energy transport, wave/body forces, linearized theory of lifting surfaces, and experimental project in the towing tank or propeller tunnel.This subject was originally offered in Course 13 (Department of Ocean Engineering) as 13.021. In 2005,Subjects
fundamentals of fluid mechanics | naval architecture | ocean science and engineering | transport theorem | conservation principles | Navier-Stokes' equation | dimensional analysis | ideal and potential flows | vorticity and Kelvin's theorem | hydrodynamic forces in potential flow | D'Alembert's paradox | added-mass | slender-body theory. Viscous-fluid flow | laminar and turbulent boundary layers | model testing | scaling laws | application of potential theory to surface waves | energy transport | wave/body forces | linearized theory of lifting surfaces | experimental project in the towing tank or propeller tunnelLicense
Content within individual OCW courses is (c) by the individual authors unless otherwise noted. MIT OpenCourseWare materials are licensed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike). For further information see https://ocw.mit.edu/terms/index.htmSite sourced from
https://ocw.mit.edu/rss/all/mit-allcourses.xmlAttribution
Click to get HTML | Click to get attribution | Click to get URLAll metadata
See all metadata