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# [SCI] Hydrodynamics **Hydrodynamics** is the mathematical description of fluid motion, founded by Euler (1755) and extended to viscous fluids by Navier and Stokes (1822–1845). ## Overview Leonhard Euler derived the equations for ideal (inviscid) fluid flow from Newton's laws. Claude-Louis Navier and George Gabriel Stokes independently added viscosity to obtain the Navier–Stokes equations, which govern all fluid motion — from blood flow to ocean currents, aircraft lift to turbine performance. These equations are nonlinear partial differential equations; their general solution remains one of the Millennium Prize Problems. Daniel Bernoulli's earlier work (1738) on pressure–velocity trade-off in pipe flow provided the first quantitative understanding of fluid dynamics and still underlies aircraft wing design. ## Key Figures & Recognition - **Daniel Bernoulli** (1700–1782): *Hydrodynamica*, 1738. - **Leonhard Euler** (1707–1783): Euler equations of fluid motion, 1755. - **Claude-Louis Navier** (1785–1836) & **George Stokes** (1819–1903): Navier–Stokes equations. ## Seminal Papers - Euler, L. "Principes généraux du mouvement des fluides." *Mém. Acad. Sci. Berlin* (1757). - Navier, C.-L. "Sur les lois du mouvement des fluides." *Mém. Acad. R. Sci.* 6 (1827). - Stokes, G.G. "On the Theories of the Internal Friction of Fluids in Motion." *Trans. Camb. Phil. Soc.* 8 (1845). ## What This Enables ⏎ - **[SCI] Aerodynamics** — Navier–Stokes equations applied to air give lift, drag, and boundary-layer theory for wings. - **[SCI] Turbulence Theory** — Reynolds' instability analysis arises directly from the nonlinearity of the Navier–Stokes equations. ⏎ # Parents * [SCI] Newtonian Mechanics * [SCI] Newtonian Mechanics
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