Incompressible Navier-Stokes equations
The incompressible Navier-Stokes equations describe conservation of mass and conservation of momentum, which can be written as a divergence-free constraint and an evolution equation:
where
Integral form
The integral form of the Navier-Stokes equations is used as starting point to develop a spatial discretization:
where
Boundary conditions
The boundary conditions on a part of the boundary
Dirichlet:
on for some ; Neumann:
on ; Periodic:
and for , where is another part of the boundary and is a translation vector; Stress free:
on , where .
Pressure equation
Taking the divergence of the momemtum equations yields a Poisson equation for the pressure:
In scalar notation, this becomes
Note the absence of time derivatives in the pressure equation. While the velocity field evolves in time, the pressure only changes such that the velocity stays divergence free.
If there are no pressure boundary conditions, the pressure is only unique up to a constant. We set this constant to
Other quantities of interest
Reynolds number
The Reynolds number is the inverse of the viscosity:
Kinetic energy
The local and total kinetic energy are defined by
Vorticity
The vorticity is defined as
In 2D, it is a scalar field given by
In 3D, it is a vector field given by
Note that the 2D vorticity is equal to the
Stream function
In 2D, the stream function
It can be found by solving
In 3D, the stream function is a vector field such that
It can be found by solving