EBK FUNDAMENTALS OF AERODYNAMICS
EBK FUNDAMENTALS OF AERODYNAMICS
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781259681486
Author: Anderson
Publisher: MCGRAW HILL BOOK COMPANY
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Chapter 10, Problem 10.17P

A horizontal flow initially at Mach I flows over a downward-sloping expansion corner, thus creating a centered Prandtl-Meyer expansion wave. The streamlines that enter the head of the expansion wave curve smoothly and continuously downward through the expansion fan, and emerge parallel to the downward sloping surface downstream of the tail of the wave, as shown in Figure 9.2b. Imagine a polar coordinate system r , Φ with its origin at the expansion corner (the vertex of the Prandtl-Meyer expansion wave), with r the usual radial distance along a ray from the origin and Φ the polar angle of r measured from the horizontal. Because the upstream flow is at Mach 1, the head of the expansion fan is a Mach wave perpendicular to the free stream. Consider a given streamline entering the expansion wave at the point ( r , Φ ) = ( r * , π / 2 ) . Construct a method for calculating the shape of this streamline as a function of r and 4) through the expansion fan. Note: To solve this problem, material from both Chapters 9 and 10 is required.

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Two large tanks, each holding 100 L of liquid, are interconnected by pipes, with the liquid flowing from tank A into tank B at a rate of 3 L/min and from B into A at a rate of 1 L/min (see Figure Q1). The liquid inside each tank is kept well stirred. A brine solution with a concentration of 0.2 kg/L of salt flows into tank A at a rate of 6 L/min. The diluted solution flows out of the system from tank A at 4 L/min and from tank B at 2 L/min. If, initially, tank A contains pure water and tank B contains 20 kg of salt. A 6 L/min 0.2 kg/L x(t) 100 L 4 L/min x(0) = 0 kg 3 L/min B y(t) 100 L y(0) = 20 kg 2 L/min 1 L/min Figure Q1 - Mixing problem for interconnected tanks Determine the mass of salt in each tank at time t > 0: Analytically (hand calculations)
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