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arXiv:0909.2882 [physics.flu-dyn]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Shockwaves and Local Hydrodynamics; Failure of the Navier-Stokes Equations

Wm. G. Hoover, Carol G. Hoover

Published 2009-09-15, updated 2020-03-22Version 5

Shockwaves provide a useful and rewarding route to the nonequilibrium properties of simple fluids far from equilibrium. For simplicity, we study a strong shockwave in a dense two-dimensional fluid. Here, our study of nonlinear transport properties makes plain the connection between the observed local hydrodynamic variables (like the various gradients and fluxes) and the chosen recipes for defining (or "measuring") those variables. The range over which nonlocal hydrodynamic averages are computed turns out to be much more significant than are the other details of the averaging algorithms. The results show clearly the incompatibility of microscopic time-reversible cause-and-effect dynamics with macroscopic instantaneously-irreversible models like the Navier-Stokes equations.

Comments: 13 pages with 9 figures, in honor of Leopoldo Garcia-Colin's 80th Birthday. Figures 8 and 9 recalculated using one-dimensional weighting functions in the averages. The momentum flux on page 5 is 9/2, not 5/2
Categories: physics.flu-dyn, nlin.CD
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