Perfect fluid

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In physics, a perfect fluid or ideal fluid is a fluid that can be completely characterized by its rest frame mass density ρm and isotropic pressure Template:Tmath.[1] Real fluids are viscous ("sticky") and contain (and conduct) heat. Perfect fluids are idealized models in which these possibilities are ignored. Specifically, perfect fluids have no shear stresses, viscosity, or heat conduction.[1] A quark–gluon plasma[2] and graphene are examples of nearly perfect fluids that could be studied in a laboratory.[3]

Non-relativistic fluid mechanics

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A flock of birds in the medium of air is an example of a perfect fluid; an electron gas is also modeled as a perfect fluid.[1]

Superfluidity

Superfluids are fluids with zero viscosity, however in practice superfluids cannot be accurately described as a perfect fluid.[5][6] In the two-fluid model, superfluids are macroscopically considered as having two-coexisting phases, a mixture between a normal fluid and a perfect fluid.[6]

Cosmology and astrophysics

File:StressEnergyTensor contravariant.svg
The stress–energy tensor of a perfect fluid contains only the diagonal components.

Perfect fluids are a fluid solution used in general relativity to model idealized distributions of matter, such as the interior of a star or an isotropic universe. In the latter case, the symmetry of the cosmological principle and the equation of state of the perfect fluid lead to Friedmann equation for the expansion of the universe.[7]

Formulation

In space-positive metric signature tensor notation, the stress–energy tensor of a perfect fluid can be written in the form

Tμν=(ρm+pc2)UμUν+pημν,

where U is the 4-velocity vector field of the fluid and where ημν=diag(1,1,1,1) is the metric tensor of Minkowski spacetime.

The case where p=0 describes a dust solution. When p=ρmc2/3, it describes a photon gas (radiation).

In time-positive metric signature tensor notation, the stress–energy tensor of a perfect fluid can be written in the form

Tμν=(ρm+pc2)UμUνpημν,

where U is the 4-velocity of the fluid and where ημν=diag(1,1,1,1) is the metric tensor of Minkowski spacetime.

This takes on a particularly simple form in the rest frame

[ρe0000p0000p0000p]

where ρe=ρmc2 is the energy density and p is the pressure of the fluid.

Perfect fluids admit a Lagrangian formulation, which allows the techniques used in field theory, in particular, quantization, to be applied to fluids.

Relativistic Euler equations read

νTμν=0

in the non relativistic limit, these equations reduce to the usual Euler equations.[8]

See also

References

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Further reading

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