Hamiltonian fluid mechanics is the application of
Hamiltonian methods to
fluid mechanics. This formalism can only apply to non
dissipative fluids.
Irrotational barotropic flow
Take the simple example of a
barotropic,
inviscid vorticity-free fluid.
Then, the conjugate fields are the mass density field ρ and the velocity potential φ. The Poisson bracket is given by
and the Hamiltonian by:
where e is the internal energy density, as a function of ρ.
For this barotropic flow, the internal energy is related to the pressure p by:
where an apostrophe ('), denotes differentiation with respect to ρ.
This Hamiltonian structure gives rise to the following two equations of motion:
begin{align}
frac{partial rho}{partial t}&=+frac{deltamathcal{H}}{deltavarphi}= -vec{nabla}cdot(rhovec{v}),
frac{partial varphi}{partial t}&=-frac{deltamathcal{H}}{deltarho}=-frac{1}{2}vec{v}cdotvec{v}-e',
end{align}
where is the velocity and is vorticity-free. The second equation leads to the Euler equations:
after exploiting the fact that the vorticity is zero:
See also
References
- R. Salmon (1988). "Hamiltonian Fluid Mechanics". Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics 20 225–256.
- T. G. Shepherd (1990). "Symmetries, conservation laws, and Hamiltonian structure in geophysical fluid dynamics". Advances in Geophysics 32 287–338.