There are numerous occasions in which a fairly uniform free-stream flow of speed V in

Chapter 9, Problem 9-55

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There are numerous occasions in which a fairly uniform free-stream flow of speed V in the x-direction encounters a long circular cylinder of radius a aligned normal to the flow (Fig. P955). Examples include air flowing around a car antenna, wind blowing against a flag pole or telephone pole, wind hitting electric wires, and ocean currents impinging on the submerged round beams that support oil platforms. In all these cases, the flow at the rear of the cylinder is separated and unsteady and usually turbulent. However, the flow in the front half of the cylinder is much more steady and predictable. In fact, except for a very thin boundary layer near the cylinder surface, the flow field can be approximated by the following steady, two-dimensional stream function in the xy- or ru-plane, with the cylinder centered at the origin: c 5 V sin u(r 2 a2/r). Generate expressions for the radial and tangential velocity components.

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