Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 10 OF 30

Main Title Flow and Transport Processes with Complex Obstructions Applications to Cities, Vegetative Canopies, and Industry / [electronic resource] :
Type EBOOK
Author Gayev, Yevgeny A.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Hunt, Julian C.R.
Publisher Springer Netherlands,
Year Published 2007
Call Number GE1-350
ISBN 9781402053856
Subjects Environmental sciences ; Meteorology ; Fluids ; Hydraulic engineering ; Physical geography ; Environmental protection
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5385-6
Collation XII, 412 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Variety of problems associated with Canopies, or EPRs -- Discrete and continuum models of flow and dispersion through canopies -- Easily Penetrable Roughnesses of different structures -- Observation and simulation of flow in vegetation canopies -- Turbulent flow in canopies on complex topography and the effects of stable stratification -- Transport in aquatic canopies -- Vorticity annihilation and inviscid blocking in multibody flows -- Fires in porous media: natural and urban canopies -- Urban air flow researches for air pollution, emergency preparedness and urban weather prediction. The NATO Advanced Study Institute "Flow and Transport Processes in Complex - structed Geometries: from cities and vegetative canopies to engineering problems" was held in Kyiv, Ukraine in the period of May 4 - 15, 2004. This book based on the papers presented there provides an overview of this new area in ?uid mechanics and its app- cations that have developed over the past three decades. The subject, whose origins lie both in theory and in practice, is now rapidly developing in many directions. The focus of applied ?uid mechanics research has steadily been shifting from - gineering to environmental applications. In both ?elds there has been great interest in the study of ?ows around obstacles; initially single isolated obstacles, and then groups, together with the e?ects of nearby resistive surfaces, such as the walls of a pipe, the ground or a free surface in hydraulics. Simpli?ed theoretical analysis began with studies of axisymmetric and cylind- cal free-mounted bodies. However other methods had to be used for quantifying the complete ?ow ?elds past arbitrary blu? bodies, either by using experiments or, when powerful computers became available, by direct calculation and solution of the full equations of ?uid dynamics. In most practical cases the Reynolds numbers are too large to compute all the small scale eddy motions which therefore have to be described statistically.