The Josephson-Anderson Relation and the Classical D'Alembert Paradox
Abstract
Generalizing prior work of P. W. Anderson and E. R. Huggins, we show that a "detailed Josephson-Anderson relation" holds for drag on a finite body held at rest in a classical incompressible fluid flowing with velocity V. The relation asserts an exact equality between the instantaneous power consumption by the drag, - F· V, and the vorticity flux across the potential mass current, -(1/2)∫ dJ∫ εijkij\,dk. Here ij is the flux in the ith coordinate direction of the conserved jth component of vorticity and the line-integrals over are taken along streamlines of the potential flow solution uφ=∇φ of the ideal Euler equation, carrying mass flux dJ=\, uφ· d A. The results generalize the theories of M. J. Lighthill for flow past a body and, in particular, the steady-state relation (1/2)εijkjk =∂i h, where h=p+(1/2)| u|2 is the generalized enthalpy or total pressure, extends Lighthill's theory of vorticity generation at solid walls into the interior of the flow. We use these results to explain drag on the body in terms of vortex dynamics, unifying the theories for classical fluids and for quantum superfluids. The results offer a new solution to the "D'Alembert paradox" at infinite Reynolds numbers and imply the necessary conditions for turbulent drag reduction.
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