Incompressible

In fluid mechanics or more generally continuum mechanics, incompressible flow (isochoric flow) refers to a flow in which the material density is constant within a fluid parcel—an infinitesimal volume that moves with the flow velocity. An equivalent statement that implies incompressibility is that the divergence of the flow velocity is zero (see the derivation below, which illustrates why these conditions are equivalent).
Incompressible flow does not imply that the fluid itself is incompressible. It is shown in the derivation below that (under the right conditions) even compressible fluids can – to a good approximation – be modelled as an incompressible flow. Incompressible flow implies that the density remains constant within a parcel of fluid that moves with the flow velocity.

View More On Wikipedia.org
  • 62

    Greg Bernhardt

    A PF Singularity From USA
    • Messages
      19,451
    • Media
      227
    • Reaction score
      10,043
    • Points
      1,237
  • 1

    mary_smith_1

    A PF Quark
    • Messages
      1
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      1
  • 1

    ATKrank

    A PF Quark
    • Messages
      4
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      1
  • 1

    Davidkippy

    A PF Quark
    • Messages
      1
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      1
  • 1

    Twigg

    A PF Organism From Boulder, Colorado
    • Messages
      893
    • Reaction score
      483
    • Points
      191
  • 1

    happyparticle

    A PF Atom
    • Messages
      406
    • Reaction score
      20
    • Points
      48
  • Back
    Top