Why does Cauchy's EOM not contain D(ρu_i)/(Dt) but instead contains ρDu_i/(Dt)?

balafiavatv

balafiavatv

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2022-08-18

Why does Cauchy's EOM not contain D ( ρ u i ) D t but instead contains ρ D u i D t ?

Answer & Explanation

a2t2esdg

a2t2esdg

Beginner2022-08-19Added 13 answers

It's essentially a consequence of continuity. From Evan's response, what you essentially want to establish is
d d t V ρ u d 3 x = V ρ D u D t d 3 x
which you can do in the following way. From Reynold's transport theorem, we know that
(1) d d t V ( t ) ρ u d 3 x = V ( t ) ( D D t ( ρ u ) + ( ρ u ) u ) d 3 x
note that the continuity equation is
D ρ D t + ρ u = 0
so we can expand D ( ρ u ) / D t from (1) as
D ( ρ u ) D t = ρ D u D t + u D ρ D t = ρ D u D t u ( ρ u )
putting this into (1) yields
d d t V ρ u d 3 x = V ρ D u D t d 3 x
The intuition here is that you're trying to track the rate of change of some quantity X multiplied by ρdV while simultaneously following dV. Well, ρdV represents a mass element, and mass is assumed to be conserved. So the if you expand this out in a product rule, the sum is only concerned about how X is changing, hence the rate of change of XρdV should just be DX/DT multiplied by ρdV.
atestiguoki

atestiguoki

Beginner2022-08-20Added 5 answers

Look at the integral version of the balance of linear momentum first. It is in the form G ˙ = F , where G is the linear momentum of a finite blob of continuum and F is the net force acting on the blob. For a blob occupying a current region R , the integral form is
D D t R ρ v d v = R t d a + R ρ b d v
where t are the supplied tractions, and b are body forces. You should be able to prove that
D D t R ρ v d v = R ρ D v D t d v
on your way to deriving the local, or differential version of the balance law.

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