The 'Navier-Stokes equations', named after
Claude-Louis Navier and
George Gabriel Stokes, describe the motion of
fluid substances such as
liquids and
gases. These equations establish that changes in
momentum in infinitesimal volumes of fluid are simply the sum of dissipative viscous forces (similar to
friction), changes in
pressure, gravity, and other forces acting inside the fluid: an application of
Newton's second law.
They are one of the most useful sets of equations because they describe the physics of a large number of phenomena of academic and economic interest. They may be used to
model weather,
ocean currents, water flow in a pipe, flow around an
airfoil (wing), and motion of
stars inside a
galaxy. As such, these equations in both full and simplified forms, are used in the design of aircraft and cars, the study of blood flow, the design of power stations, the analysis of the effects of pollution, etc. Coupled with
Maxwell's equations they can be used to model and study
magnetohydrodynamics.
The Navier-Stokes equations are also of great interest in a purely mathematical sense. Somewhat surprisingly, given their wide range of practical uses, mathematicians have proved neither that in three dimensions solutions always exist (existence), nor that if they do exist they do not contain any infinities, singularities or discontinuities (smoothness). These are called the
Navier-Stokes existence and smoothness problems. The
Clay Mathematics Institute has called this one of the
seven most important open problems in mathematics, and offered a $1,000,000 prize for a solution or a counter-example.
The Navier-Stokes equations are
differential equations which, unlike
algebraic equations, do not explicitly establish a relation among the variables of interest (e.g.
velocity and
pressure), rather they establish relations among the
rates of change. For example, the Navier-Stokes equations for simple case of an
ideal fluid (inviscid) can state that acceleration (the
rate of change of
velocity) is proportional to the
gradient (a type of multivariate derivative) of pressure.
Contrary to what is normally seen in
classical mechanics, the Navier-Stokes equations dictate not
position but rather
velocity. A solution of the Navier-Stokes equations is called a velocity field or flow field, which is a description of the velocity of the fluid at a given point in space and time. Once the velocity field is solved for, other quantities of interest (such as flow rate, drag force, or the path a "particle" of fluid will take) may be found.
Properties
Nonlinearity
The Navier-Stokes equations are
nonlinear partial differential equations in almost any real situation (an exception is
creeping flow). The nonlinearity makes most problems difficult or impossible to solve and is part of the cause of
turbulence.
The nonlinearity is due to
convective acceleration, which is an acceleration associated with the change in velocity over position. Hence, any convective flow, whether turbulent or not, will involve nonlinearity, an example of convective but
laminar (nonturbulent) flow would be the passage of a viscous fluid (for example, oil) through a small converging
nozzle. Such flows, whether exactly solvable or not, can often be thoroughly studied and understood.
Turbulence
Turbulence is the time dependent
chaotic behavior seen in many fluid flows. It is generally believed that it is due to the
inertia of the fluid as a whole: the culmination of time dependent and convective acceleration; hence flows where inertial effects are small tend to be laminar (the
Reynolds number quantifies how much the flow is affected by inertia). It is believed, though not known with certainty, that the Navier-Stokes equations model turbulence properly.
For essentially all turbulent situations, such as global weather systems like
El Niño or the
aerodynamics of a wing, solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations must be found with the help of computers. A variety of computer programs (both commercial and academic) have been developed to solve the Navier-Stokes equations using various numerical methods. This approach is collectively called
computational fluid dynamics or CFD. Though CFD will theoretically work on any flow, in practice 'many' common flows (such as flow over a wing) contain so much detail that no computer can handle in any reasonable amount of time.
Even though turbulence is an everyday experience, it is extremely difficult to find solutions, quantify, or in general characterize. A $1,000,000
prize was offered in May 2000 by the
Clay Mathematics Institute to whoever makes
preliminary progress toward a mathematical theory which will help in the understanding of this phenomenon.
Applicability
Together with supplemental equations (for example, conservation of mass) and well formulated boundary conditions, the Navier-Stokes equations seem to model fluid motion accurately; even turbulent flows seem (on average) to agree with real world observations.
The Navier-Stokes equations assume that the fluid being studied is a
continuum. At very small scales or under extreme conditions, real fluids made out of discrete molecules will produce results different from the continuous fluids modeled by the Navier-Stokes equations. Depending on the
Knudsen number of the problem,
statistical mechanics or possibly even
molecular dynamics may be a more appropriate approach.
Another limitation is very simply the complicated nature of the equations. Time tested formulations exist for common fluid families, but the application of the Navier-Stokes equations to less common families tends to result in very complicated formulations which are an area of current research. For this reason, the Navier-Stokes equations are usually written for
Newtonian fluids.
Derivation and description
Main articles: Navier-Stokes equations/Derivation
The derivation of the Navier-Stokes equations begins with the conservation of mass, momentum, and energy being written for an arbitrary control volume. In an
inertial frame of reference, the most general form of the Navier-Stokes equations ends up being:
:
This is a statement of the conservation of momentum in a fluid, it is an application of
Newton's second law to a
continuum. This equation is often written using the
substantive derivative, making it more apparent that this is a statement of Newton's law:
:
The left side of the equation describes acceleration, and may be composed of time dependent or convective effects (also the effects of non-inertial coordinates if present).
The right side of the equation is in effect a summation of
body forces.
and
are gradients of surface forces and represent stresses inside the fluid, analogous to stresses in a solid.
is called the pressure gradient and arises from
normal stresses that turn up in almost all situations, dynamic or not.
conventionally describes viscosity; for incompressible flow, this is only a shear effect.
represents "other" forces, such as
gravity.
The viscous term
contains too many unknowns to be immediately useable, hence the general form above isn't directly applicable to practical problems. For this reason, assumptions on the specific viscous behavior of a fluid are made (based on natural observations) and applied in order to specify this quantity in terms of familiar variables, such as velocity. For example, this term becomes the useful quantity
when the fluid is assumed incompressible and
Newtonian.
The Navier-Stokes equations are strictly a statement of the conservation of momentum. In order to fully describe fluid flow, more information is needed (how much depends on the assumptions made), this may include the conservation of mass, the conservation of energy, or an
equation of state.
Regardless of the flow assumptions, a statement of the
conservation of mass is nearly always necessary. This is achieved through the
continuity equation, given in its most general form as:
:
or, using the substantive derivative:
:
Incompressible flow of Newtonian fluids
The vast majority of work on the Navier-Stokes equations is done under an
incompressible flow assumption for
Newtonian fluids. The incompressible flow assumption typically holds well even when dealing with a "compressible" fluid, such as air at room temperature (even when flowing up to about Mach 0.3). Taking the incompressible flow assumption into account and assuming constant viscosity, the Navier-Stokes equations will read (in vector form):
:
'f' represents "other"
body forces (forces per unit volume), such as
gravity or
centrifugal force. It's well worth observing the meaning of each term:
:
Note that only the convective terms are nonlinear for incompressible Newtonian flow. The convective acceleration is an acceleration caused by a (possibly steady) change in velocity over ''position'', for example the speeding up of fluid entering a converging
nozzle. Though individual fluid particles are being accelerated and thus are under unsteady motion, the flow field (a velocity distribution) will not necessarily be time dependent.
Another important observation is that the viscosity is represented by the
Laplacian of the velocity field. This implies that Newtonian viscosity is 'diffusion of momentum', this works in much the same way as the
diffusion of heat seen in the
heat equation (which also involves the Laplacian).
If temperature effects are also neglected, the only "other" equation needed is the continuity equation. Under the incompressible assumption, density is a constant and it follows that the equation will simplify to:
:
This is more specifically a statement of the conservation of volume (see
divergence). If temperature effects are additionally assumed negligible, this is the only supplemental equation needed.
These equations are commonly used in 3 coordinates systems:
Cartesian,
cylindrical, and
spherical. The Cartesian equations follow directly from the vector equation above, obtaining equations in other coordinate systems will require a
change of variables.
Cartesian coordinates
Writing the vector equation explicitly,
:
:
:
Note that gravity has been accounted for as a body force, and the values of
will depend on the orientation of gravity with respect to the chosen set of coordinates.
The continuity equation reads:
:
Note that the velocity components (the dependent variables to be solved for) are u, v, w. This system of four equations compromises the most commonly used and studied form. Though comparatively more compact than other representations, this is a
nonlinear system of
partial differential equations for which solutions are difficult to obtain.
Cylindrical coordinates
A change of variables on the Cartesian equations will yield the following momentum equations for ''r'', θ, and ''z'':
:
:
:
The gravity components will generally not be constants, however for most applications either the coordinates are chosen so that the gravity components are constant or else it is assumed that gravity is counteracted by a pressure field (for example, flow in horizontal pipe is treated normally without gravity and without a vertical pressure gradient). The continuity equation is:
:
This cylindrical representation of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations is the second most commonly seen (the first being Cartesian above).
Application to specific problems
The Navier-Stokes equations, even when written explicitly for specific fluids, are rather generic in nature and their proper application to specific problems can be very diverse. This is partly because there is an enormous variety of problems that may be modeled, ranging from as simple as the distribution of static pressure to as complicated as multiphase flow driven by
surface tension.
Generally, application to specific problems begins with some flow assumptions and initial/boundary condition formulation, this may be followed by
scale analysis to further simplify the problem. For example, after assuming steady, parallel, one dimensional, nonconvective pressure driven flow between parallel plates, the resulting scaled (dimensionless)
boundary value problem is:

Visualization of a) parallel flow and b) radial flow.
:
The boundary condition is the
no slip condition. This problem is easily solved for the flow field:
:
From this point onward more quantities of interest can be easily obtained, such as viscous drag force or net flow rate.
Difficulties may arise when the problem becomes slightly more complicated. A seemingly modest twist on the parallel flow above would be the ''radial'' flow between parallel plates; this involves convection and thus nonlinearity. The velocity field may be represented by a function
that must satisfy:
:
This
ordinary differential equation is what is obtained when the Navier-Stokes equations are written and the flow assumptions applied (additionally, the pressure gradient is solved for). The
nonlinear term makes this a very difficult problem to solve analytically (a lengthy
implicit solution may be found which involves
elliptic integrals and
roots of cubic polynomials). Issues with the actual existence of solutions arise for R > 22.609 (approximately), the parameter R being similar to the
Reynolds number. This is an example of flow assumptions losing their applicability, and an example of the difficulty in "high" Reynolds number flows.
See also
★
Reynolds transport theorem
★
Reynolds number
★
Mach number
★
Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations
★
Multiphase flow
★
Adhémar Jean Claude Barré de Saint-Venant
★
Millennium prize problem details
References
★ Inge L. Rhyming ''Dynamique des fluides'', 1991 PPUR
★ A.D. Polyanin, A.M. Kutepov, A.V. Vyazmin, and D.A. Kazenin, ''Hydrodynamics, Mass and Heat Transfer in Chemical Engineering'', Taylor & Francis, London, 2002. ISBN 0-415-27237-8
External links
★
Derivation and detailed discussion of Navier-Stokes equation
★
Simplified derivation of the Navier-Stokes equations
★
QEDen Millennium Prize Problems Wiki
★
CFD online software list A compilation of codes, including Navier-Stokes solvers.