Talk:Shock wave/Archive 2
Dispersive Shocks Shock waves can exist in the absence of viscosity. In this case, the shock front is oscillatory because it is regularized by dispersion/diffraction, rather than viscosity. Examples of these shocks can be found in condensed matter physics and in optics. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 140.180.3.174 (talk) 22:40, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
MHD shocks and discontinuities
[edit]I agree with previous posted comments that this article is really an aerodynamic one. Instead of trying to re-write it to include MHD shocks, I am creating a MHD shocks and discontinuities (ok bad title, but as good as I can come up with) page. We might change titles later. USferdinand 21:36, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
Major changes (refactored from top)
[edit]I am in a process changing or removing some of the mistakes in this article. If you for some believe that you better contact me at barmeir at gmail.com and I will discuss with you the issue(s) that you have. I believe that I will convince you (Yes, I am a bite over confident but I have a reason for it. I have contributed to this area a bit more most of usual researchers group. You can check my book on the history section of these field.).
List of changes
- shock wave is not propagating it can be stationary.
- shock wave is a disturbance, For example in Fanno flow shock occurs without any disturbance,
- "The shock wave is one of several different ways in which a gas in a supersonic flow can be compressed. Two other methods are isentropic and Prandtl-Meyer compressions." This statement is simply wrong. One in shock wave no compression is achieved (the stagnation pressure remains the same. only the static pressure increase). Second Prandtl-Meyer function is isentropic function thus this statement makes no sense.
- is there any shock that not associated with supersonic flow.I would like to find one. thus the title
of shock in supersonic flow implies that the subsonic with shock is just in the virtual world (where entropy can increase.
Very strange article
This article has more mistakes than expected. For example, the speed of moving shock can be above and below the speed of sound and not as mentioned in this article to be above the speed of sound. It simply not correct.
--potto 16:36, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Dear Gennik I've reverted your changes, and would request that you seriously reconsider which changes you make to this article. Just deleting essentially the whole artical and replacing with your own material is a serious problem. This is for three major reasons:
- I'm sorry, but your writing is not in English. It is not grammatical, and often doesn't make sense. I note this because, although your changes may be correct, it doesn't help if no-one can understand them.
- Your list of changes is dubious.
- A shock is always stationary with respect to one frame.
- Look up disturbance in a dictionary
- Although a Prandtl-Meyer compression is an isentropic compression, the textbook examples of isentropic compression are waveless, and so it probably deserves a special mention.
- Certainly all shocks are associated with locally supersonic upstream flow. This is, however a general use encyclopaedia. Therefore special mention of shocks in transonic flow is probably a good idea.
- I wonder about some of your content. For instance an analytical solution to the weak-solution oblique shock has been known for at least 50 years.
- In summary, if you want to re-add the material which you've added I would ask you to edit the existing article rather than rewriting. Please also pay particular attention to your grammar, since it appears that English is not your native language. I am very willing to help with any of this, but I'm, not willing to re-write your changes from scratch.
AKAF 12:06, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Re Prandtl-Meyer: if as you say it is an isentropic compression, then the current text is misleading:
- Two other methods are isentropic and Prandtl-Meyer compressions.
- I suggest changing it to something like:
- Some other methods are isentropic compressions, including Prandtl-Meyer compressions. --Coppertwig 17:47, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
- Re Prandtl-Meyer: if as you say it is an isentropic compression, then the current text is misleading:
I wish that it was possible to correct from this point
[edit]The article is full of mistakes. I wish that It was possible to change it form this point but it is easier to go from beginning. For example, the article starts with the below statement which is erroneous.
- (or simply "shock") is a type of propagating disturbance. Like a normal wave, a shock wave carries :energy and can propagate through a medium
shock is in many case is stationary as you mentioned and do not move to any place with any reasonable frame of reference. Let me give an example. In converging diverging nozzle flow there is a shock for large range of pressure ratios. I hope that you agree that this shock is stationary (if you have problems to understand read my book on isentropic flow).
BRO, I been blown up, does that count? IED under a car! Im EOD, Old Skool, so knock of the psycho babble Bro. Heres the scoop, There is high and low order deflagrations or detonations. The deflagration is usually low powered, "earth moving type of power", but slow. A Detonation on the other hand moves betwen 3,000FPS and 29,900FPS, < Bro, if that aint supersonic, then I dont know what is??????? Next, There Are Two Waves that Exist in a Detonation: A "shattering first wave", followed by a low pressure, solid power secondary "carrier wave". The problem most people have no clue about is what really is injurying our soldiers. Its two things (well more, ill name a few), One, That shattering wave (causes) limbs to be removed, debris is hypervelocity, anything within that wave will feel (massive overpressure), Then when the first wave passes, the secondary Carrier Wave comes in with a "sucking pressure", which is the underpressure wave. So what happens is any person within this situation encounters the following. (from personal experience) 1) The sudden detonation, flash of light a u-s (microsecond) before the shatter wave arrives, the overpressure attacks your insides. We are made of water..... so, the liquid is unaffected, but all airpockets in the human body now go through the damaging effects of the over/under pressure waves. Its like watching a drop of water hit a smooth water face, the drop hits, the wave goes out, then if you look near the middle, the wave / part of it, comes back to the center, thus causing the usual "upward throw" of a "droplet" of water......... peace, may you not be near it when it detonates.DW —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.108.98.165 (talk) 04:43, 5 December 2007 (UTC)
- But the text said that it propogates through a medium. In that case the medium is moving at the same speed the shockwave is, but in the opposite direction. So the original text is not actually incorrect, although it may very well be unconventional.WolfKeeper 17:47, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
If you chose an arbitrary frame of reference, the shock is moving with reference to that frame but the discontinuity don't move to any physical place or object. Thus, saying that shock is propagating is misleading at best.
- The text said it propogates through a medium, this implies that they are referring to the mediums reference frame.WolfKeeper 17:47, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Let me take your explantion one step further. we have a disturbance propogates due to unknown reason for unknown reason in the speed of incoming (upstream) gas. Thus, if you increase the gas velocity then your disturbance will increase the speed. Conclusion from this, that gas is the source of this disturbance. So, why the disturbance is moving in the opposite direction? If the gas is the source of your disturbance than if you cut the nozzle it should not effect the disturbance, yet it will.
genick --potto 04:31, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
- I understand some of the above, but I don't understand the last part. I think you're making an argument to try to support the point that "propagating through a medium" is misleading if the shock wave is stationary while the medium moves. I think "propagating through a medium" sounds OK to me. However, if there are situations where the shock wave is not just coincidentally stationary, that is, where the velocity of the medium doesn't just happen by coincidence to be the exact opposite of the velocity of the wave through the medium, but where there are actual feedback mechanisms to keep the wave stationary, then perhaps "propagating through a medium" is not the best wording. Maybe people can try to think up some other wordings.
- It seems to me that a hydraulic jump is an example of such a phenomenon, where it is not as appropriate to talk about it propagating through a medium, since there are often factors that tend to keep it in a particular place given the conditions. For example, when you run the tap onto the bottom of the kitchen sink, you can get a circular hydraulic jump which tends to stay at about the same radius given a certain flow speed, and will return to that radius if disturbed. I'm not sure whether a hydraulic jump counts as a type of shock wave or whether some shock waves have similar behaviour.
- If something is at exactly the opposite velocity "for unknown reason" then maybe you don't know that one velocity will change when you change the other. Maybe you mean that for unknown reason it always moves at exactly opposite velocity no matter what the other velocity is. The question is: are there physical situations where the speed of the shock wave in the medium does tend to change when the speed of the medium changes, so that the shock wave tends to stay stationary, as hydraulic jumps sometimes do?
- I suppose "cut the nozzle" means turn off the source of moving gas. Of course, if you do that, the shock wave will stop. I don't understand the last two sentences of your argument. You said it had a particular velocity "for unknown reason", so I don't see why, later, you asked "why" it had that velocity.--Coppertwig 18:23, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
- Moreover the word disturbance mean in wiki to change (check it out) but shock isn't just a change, it is a discontinuity. For example, the flow in our nozzle is full of disturbances (changes) but only one discontinuity. That is the reason shock is call discontinuity and not as a change.
- If the independent variable is time, a discontinuity is a change. If the independent variable is a spatial dimension (distance) then a discontinuity can also be considered to be a change from the point of view of a point in a moving reference frame, such as a particle in the medium -- which tends to be a relevant point of view in these situations.--Coppertwig 18:23, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
Let me also explain you the issue of energy, shock does not carry any energy there isn't a change in energy in most shocks. Starting that shock carries energy is simply wrong because the shock, for example, in our nozzle does not carry any energy or loss any energy. If you claim to opposite than I would to see reference(s) or your derivations. You can check my book or Shapiro or any other book that you like about this issue.
- I don't see how that could be true in the general case. For example a shockwave forms around a nuclear bomb that very definitely does propogate for a distance at least, and I don't see how that would not be carrying energy away. I'm wondering if the solution is that shockwaves can carry kinetic energy, in the case of a nozzle the shockwave is stationary in the lab frame, so that would explain your example. Also see: [1] which very definitely says that shock waves can carry energy.WolfKeeper 17:47, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Again you are confusing issues. I wish that you once pick in a good book, check my book or Shapiro. There are moving shocks and there are stationary shocks. In the case of stationary shock, there is no energy change. In the case of moving shocks there is a difference between energy in different frame of reference. This is the source of your confusion. Perhes, you should write about this topic after you took a class in gas dynamics.
--potto 04:44, 2 February 2007 (UTC) genick
- Could you describe an example of stationary shock? I would like to try to understand it more fully. I searched for the word "stationary" in the article but didn't see anything about stationary shock; I think probably it needs to be added. Also, please explain what you mean by "no energy change". Energy is conserved in any case. I would be surprised if there could be a shock wave without any conversion of energy to heat. Can it happen as a thermodynamically reversible process? Why would it matter whether it's moving or not? Every shock must be stationary is some reference frame (as someone else pointed out), but if it's thermodynamically reversible it should be reversible in all reference frames. --Coppertwig 18:23, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
I can go on and on on almost every sentence in this article (by the way you misspell this word [article] check in your response). I am not saying that my English is perfect and I sure that yours is better. You can change my English as many help me with my books. I saw that you change others term that I work in wiki. It is fine by me.
You mentioned an analytical solution to oblique shock, please show a place with that solution. If you want to know about it more read my book in the history section ([www.potto.org/gasDynamics/node43.html]) about it and check my book about the actual full solution to oblique shock ([www.potto.org/gasDynamics/node196.html]). Clearly from your reaction, you not aware of that solution which shows new understanding about zero inclination angle.
you stated that
- the textbook examples of isentropic compression are waveless,
what do you mean by that statement? I cannot find any meaning this statement. what textbook you referring to?
By the way would you like to identify your self, so I know who I am talking to.
This isn't correct shock —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Genick (talk • contribs) 15:34, 1 February 2007 (UTC).
Thank you! now we talk
[edit]We have to find a better way to let each other know answer. I do not care how. You can hide and it doesn't bother me. As long we can work on the content and it will not take very long, it is fine. --potto 19:25, 1 February 2007 (UTC) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Genick (talk • contribs) 19:18, 1 February 2007 (UTC).
- Dear Genick.
- No I will not identify myself. That's against the wikipedia norms and rude to ask. I'll also not communicate by direct email.
Fine --potto 23:21, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- I do not think that the article is perfect. Actually I think that there are many mistakes. I'd like them to be fixed. I should be clear that I think that your additions are probably useful. Just I would please ask you to think before changing things since I think that in your big change not a single sentence was without major grammatical and spelling errors and confusions in meaning. It's a good idea to introduce such changes more slowly, so that these erros can be ironed out by the community. Otherwise perple will decide (Like I did) that the overall result of a particular edit is negative, and revert.
Fine! you would me to show all the mistakes. That is okay with me. --potto 23:21, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Clearly you think that "propagating disturbance" is confusing. It is certainly not formally incorrect in the gas frame. Perhaps you would like to give a clarification which would help the general reader. In your example, if the nozzle were in a flying engine, then the shock wave would indeed be propagating wrt the ground. If you want to change "disturbance" to "discontinuity", though I'd be the last person to stop you.
that is now! we can change it to discontinuity ?
and it should read
A shock wave (or simply "shock") is a type of discontinuity in the flow. Shock waves are characterized by a sudden and abrupt change in the characteristics of the medium (such as pressure, temperature, and speed).
--potto 23:21, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- If you don't like the possibility of shocks carrying energy, then you should reformulate it more exactly. Consider however the simple exmple of a blunt body with a bow shock. An air particle on the stagnation line is accelerated from standstill to (a fraction of) the body's velocity as it crosses the shock. In this way this particle gains energy.
What you saying is of characteristic of moving shock (change of frame of reference from the shock front to stationary frame). You can read and learn more about it in/from my book about moving or in Shapiro (very limit but nevertheless informative). Thus, the issue of moving energy should not be part of the main issue of shock wave. In fact, shock is analyzed when the energy assumed conserved. (by the way, what is your background so I know how to explain these issues to you. Thus, all the point of energy must be either eliminate or move to moving shock (different article).
- The standard analytical solutions to the oblique shock can be found in (for example) NACA1135 equations 115-170. If you claim that you are the first person to find an analytical solution to the oblique shock, I think you'll be disappointed. Your research may indeed be (new,interesting,correct) and if you can provide a refereed publication which agrees with you, then it could be added to comments about the standard solutions.
Good that you brought this point. Read the NACA1135 report and refer to the wiki article on oblique shock. or to NACA 1135 page 10 equation 150a. It state "No convenient explicit relations exist" please locate it in the report. This relationship is the most important one. Your comment simply insults over 50 Ph.D. who dedicate you find the solution to this equation (if you would like to have ref i can provide you). This solution is important because it deals with the most fundamental question what will be shock angle for given upstream Mach number and wedge angle. The approximation that confuse with the solution exist but it is wrong (this is what I refers to the error in NACA 1135. The assumptions are wrong .). Now you can review the solution, it is explicitly explain in my book or ask someone who know basic mathematic (no knowledge in differential equations is needed, just simple algebra, well, a bit more than high school, though some high school students can figure it out.). The equations that you referred to 115-170 include equation 150a (may be you should read again that report) are either approximations or showing the reverse relationship (which is 1 to 1 and not 1 to 3 (solutions)). I hope that my explanation convince you or direct you to read so that you can understand. If you understand what I am saying, should we go with the history section? or do you need more explanations? if so, what are the points that you do not understand? By The way, my book with the solution is wildely used many places. --potto 05:08, 2 February 2007 (UTC) genick bar-meir
- Most people learn about isentropic flow in thermodynamics, which deals primarily with subsonic flow. As an example, Isentropic_flow does not include the word "wave" anywhere. The fact that certain kinds of waves can cause an isentropic compression is sufficiently far from "general knowledge" that it should be explained.
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You are steeping on something strange. I would partially agree with if NACA 1135 was not wrong on this point. The analytical solution (that you refuse or cannot read) shows that it isn't possible. The isentropic process in supersonic flow is P-M function.
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I understand that you might be ashamed if people know who you are. But please let me know what is your level of knowledge or education so my explanations will be clear to you. --potto 20:27, 1 February 2007 (UTC) Genick Bar-Meir,
ps. My adviser E.R.G. Eckert, the father of modern heat transfer, got worse reception than me. Only then people did not hide and they openly claim that he was wrong and mistaken.
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AKAF 17:40, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- refactoring to bottom of page (Genick please write your answers here)
maybe the question below isn't needed
[edit]Now when you talk specific issues may be we can resolve it.
check below for my answers and explanations. genick --potto 20:31, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
question to user:AKAF
[edit]Dear sir/Madam,
I request a mediation against your editing in shock wave. I hope that you will either explain why you would like to keep errors in the article or stop changing it. If you believe that your corrections are of/on any base please explain. you can find the meditation requrest in http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Wikipedia:Mediation_Cabal/Cases/2007-02-01_shock_wave
Genick
I have nothing to hide as you do. everything that I do is transparent and if you like discuss with me any of the issues or you believe that you are right and I am wrong please show or explain it. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Genick (talk • contribs) 18:29, 1 February 2007 (UTC).
- Please see my longer reply on the RfM. May I suggest you read WP:EP, WP:NOR, WP:CIV, WP:NPA, WP:U, WP:AB and WP:CON. They may help you to understand some of the norms on wikipedia. I am not saying that all of these impact you directly, but some of your edits indicate that you are unaware of them. AKAF 10:22, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
General Replies to Genick
[edit]Genick, please use Wikipedia style. Additions to talk and user pages are added at the bottom. Indentation should be undertaken with the colon [:] symbol. Higher layers of indenting can be caused by repeating the colon. All posts should be signed by using 4 tildes.
Attacking other editors for using a pseudonym is absolutely unacceptable. Requiring personally identifying information is unacceptable. Additionally you should assume good faith and be polite. We all make mistakes. Here from Wolfkeeper's talk page is one of yours. I quote it here as an example of what wikipedia is absolutely not about:
Sir, I do what I am good at. I think that you should do what you are good at. Shock wave is not a disturbance and it doesn't propogates it sometime stationary.
Second, and to your some of your specific comments, Wikipedia is a general use encyclopaedia. As a rule, its best to use examples with which the layman will be more familiar. It's an interesting contradiction that fluid dynamicists are often almost completely unaware of aircraft or flying bodies because they are not the simple devices which are used to investigate fluid phoenomena. The layman is however far more likely to be only aware of fluid flow as it affects external aerodynamics on a flying object. We should try to explain these processes so that they can be understood by someone of this background.
To your comments on the analytical solution of an oblique shock: The standary equations for the oblique shock are an analytical solution. There are equations which you can use to find pressure/density/Mach jumps across an oblique shock if the shock angle is known. Finding the shock angle requires an iterative solution, which is, as the NACA 1135 states, not explicit. In these times where a relatively cheap calculator can solve the equation the inconvenience is long forgotten. I consider the sentence in example 4 of this article to be a good summary. With this in mind I find your assertion that an analytic solution did not exist before your work at best misleading.
To your comments on energy transfer by a shock: Energy is assumed conserved in the shock frame. It still isn't explanatory to anyone who has heard a sonic boom. Clearly there is energy transferred there (in this case from the aircraft to your eardrum). Your explanation is certainly true, but not useful in explaining shocks to a general audience.
AKAF 09:30, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
Archiving Propsal
[edit]I'd like to archive everything above the archive cutline. Please move the cutline if you'd like it somewhere else. AKAF 10:07, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
I disagree
[edit]I disagree I think that people should see your reactions so that others can judge where this value is going to. It is very important that you will not remove these remarks. You aren't the judge. Your insistence to keep errors in this article is strange. --potto 12:27, 2 February 2007 (UTC) Genick Bar-Meir. --potto 12:36, 2 February 2007 (UTC) Wikipedia is for everyone. Your explanation isn't only wrong but confusing. If you would like to explain atomic boom go ahead and do so. Atomic boom is not same as shock wave even though some material is overlapping. You can also write about explosive if you like to explain boom. --potto 12:36, 2 February 2007 (UTC) genick
- Please search for "archive cutline" in the page to see where I'd like to archive from. It's between the sections "Fundamental properties" and "MHD shocks and discontinuities".AKAF 12:51, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
- I've archived from the cutline today. If there's something you think should remain on the main page, please feel free to copy it back. AKAF 10:07, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
General Replies to AKAF user
[edit]You prefer wrong and confusing on right and confusing. Well, this your chose. I wonder who many will agree with you. Look if you insist on keep these mistakes in this article I will not add material to it. I find it disrespectful that you just like to ignore knowledge. If you do not have the time to read material that is fine. Your insistence on being judge to material that you are not familiar isn't respectful, at least you should read a good book about the topic. your statement "that fluid dynamicists are often almost completely unaware of aircraft or flying bodies because they are not the simple devices" is strange. who you think design airplane? not fluid mechanics people? Well maybe, I never saw modern airplane designed by not experts. Did you saw airplane designed by peso engineers. Even the wright brothers where fluid mechanics people. If you think so, I guess there is more can be said about this. I do agree that the explanation should be simple that most people can understand this article. It was not intended for people like me, I already know it and read my book if forgot something. But insert simple urban myths isn't the solution. I suggest that you take my explanation edit the English to way that it make things look simple to you. Ask me questions if you need clarifications, I will be glad to help. Hey, that what I am all about (check my web site www.potto.org). You do not have to put it in the front page right away. As I state before this article is full with mistakes. I don't make sense that expert will article full with mistakes but the other way around that expert write the skeleton and you guys will change it to make simple to ordinary reader to understand.
you stated that
- Finding the shock angle requires an iterative solution, which is, as the NACA 1135 states, not explicit. In these times where a relatively cheap calculator can solve the equation the inconvenience is long forgotten. I consider the sentence in example 4 of this article to be a good summary.
Again I find this remark offensive not to me but to soo many Ph.D. who work years on this issue. I don't know a cheap calculator which do these calculation. I would like to find one. To explain this in simple term this equation 150a in NACA report is the source to weak and strong shock (also to the unsteady one). This equation explain the detach shock. You dismissive of what so many students spend years to understand. My solution, was preceded by partial solution of G. Emmanual G. who wrote a book about it. Other books, (see for example Anderson) copy that partial solution and had several section discussing it. Are all these people are idiots according to you?
In the article (I believe that is what you mean)
- for a perfect gas and inviscid flow field, an analytic solution is available, such that the pressure ratio, temperature ratio, angle of the wedge and the downstream Mach number can all be calculated knowing the upstream Mach number and the shock angle.
Again, the problem of design is: for needed airplane speed and given angle (design) what should be shock angle. And not the opposite. What is states there is basically, if I know the solution how I use it utilizing the normal shock relationships to obtain the properties ratios. Clearly, the first part contradicts the second part of the sentence.
The article states that
- Smaller shock angles are associated with higher downstream Mach numbers, and the special case where the shock wave is at 90 degrees to the oncoming flow (Normal shock), is associated with a downstream Mach number of one. These follow the "weak-shock" solutions of the analytic equations.
This is simply wrong. I can copy a whole section from my book explaining this. I think that if you care, enough, you should read my book in the oblique chapter. The last statement is really strange. what analytical equations are you guys talking about? The approximations in NACA 1135 or Emmanual partial solution. May be the one that you guys have but did not published or published somewhere? If so please let me know where.
Is there way that you guys really want to have good article? If so let me know? Your dismissiveness of knowledge not clear to me. Can you explain it to me. I really would like to understand you guys. Genick --potto 15:43, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
- Reply to Genick
- The vast majority of people have never seen a schlieren photo of a 2-D nozzle flow. Most have seen an airplane. Thus for the layperson the 2-D nozzle flow in your example is the unusual case.
- I realise that finding the shock angle (beta) from the standard equation:
- is an iterative problem. I'm sorry but that absolutely doesn't require years of PhD research. And this is the equation which is being referred to in NACA1135. There is simply no convient way of expressing beta accurately as a function of theta. Nevertheless finding beta if theta is known isn't rocket science.
I think its clear that if you swap "upstream" for "downstream" then this statement is correct. Just a mistake, not an example of my general perfidity.Smaller shock angles are associated with higher downstream Mach numbers, and the special case where the shock wave is at 90 degrees to the oncoming flow (Normal shock), is associated with a downstream Mach number of one. These follow the "weak-shock" solutions of the analytic equations.
AKAF 16:24, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
please read my comments (Moved from User talk:AKAF)
[edit]Look you say that it need modifications. I for example, suggested something for the first paragraph. I assume that you do not agree, I just do not know. are you welling to change anything? If so why don't you agree on any change? You know that it is wrong. So, why keep it? Can you help me here? Is there a secret agenda that I am not aware of?
--potto 15:54, 2 February 2007 (UTC) Genick
- I did read it and I'm making what I believe to be the appropriate change now, leaving "standing shock" as a special case, much as "standing wave" is often considered a special case of wave motion. I can further assure you that I do work for an agency with a three-letter acronym. AKAF 16:38, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
There is improvment
[edit]Now the first sentence is good. Now we can discuss the second. Normal shock is one of the catecories of shock wave. Thus,
- Like a normal wave, a shock wave carries energy and can propagate through a medium or, in special cases, through a field such as the electromagnetic field in the absence of a physical medium.
has to be chagned because it impoly that normal shock isn't a shock wave which is not true.
I will agree to something like
- The aviable engry (incrase of entropy) is lost in shock wave. or Shock must occur in medium in which
aviable engry (incrase of entropy) is lost.
Simply energy is not correct. --potto 21:20, 2 February 2007 (UTC) Genick
- Genick I'm sorry but I'm a little confused which part you're referring to here. I have also noticed a problem with the use of the word "normal". Sometimes it means "ordinary" and sometimes it means "at 90 degrees". Perhaps we should go through and make a general replace so that the style is consistent? Maybe a definition of "Normal shock" (is a shock at 90 degrees to the oncoming flow) would also be in order? Especially since "Normal" is not used in this sense in non-specialist language?
- May I suggest for your example: "Although the total energy is preserved when matter is processed by a shock wave, the available energy which can be extracted as work (entropy) is decreased. This has the practical effect, for example, that an aircraft with shocks will experience an additional drag force to that which it would experience if the flow was shockless."
- I'm a little unsure what you want to say in the statement about the medium.
- RegardsAKAF 10:21, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
One possible solution is to define the normal shock as it used commonly by every one who is dealing with shock.
"Normal shock in this field refers to ...." This is not Normal in the sanse of normal ... I think that will solve the problem.
--potto 18:34, 5 February 2007 (UTC) Genick Bar-Meir
your suggestion:
- Although the total energy is preserved when matter is processed by a shock wave, the available energy which can be extracted as work (entropy) is decreased. This has the practical effect, for example, that an aircraft with shocks will experience an additional drag force to that which it would experience if the flow was shockless.
should be improved by
- Although the total energy is preserved when matter is processed by a shock wave, the available energy which can be extracted as work (entropy increased) is decreased. This has the practical effect, for example, that an aircraft with shocks will experience an additional drag force to that which it would experience if the flow was shockless.
Then it is okay by me
--potto 18:56, 5 February 2007 (UTC) Genick
- Hi Genick, I see your point. I think though that the increased/decreased is a bit confusing. So I'd like to suggest the following:"Although the total energy is preserved when matter is processed by a shock wave, the available energy which can be extracted as work is decreased (Entropy is increased). This has the practical effect, for example, that an aircraft with shocks will experience an additional drag force to that which it would experience if the flow was shockless." AKAF 09:32, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- I added this provisionally, to see how it looks. Feel free to jump in and edit if you don't agree.AKAF 15:56, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- It now says Although the total energy is preserved when matter is processed by a shock wave, the available energy which can be extracted as work is decreased (Entropy is increased). I find the first part of this confusing. Total energy is always conserved in any case; no need to say that. So it leads the reader to think that something else is meant. It seems to be saying that some matter has the same amount of energy after a shock wave has passed through it as the same matter had before. (The phrase "processed by a shock wave" gives this impression.) I think this impression is wrong. I think the temperature is higher after the shock wave has passed through, therefore more energy is present. The energy was in the shock wave, and after the shock wave went past a mass of matter, the shock wave has less energy and some of the energy is left behind in the matter. I suggest changing it to: Although the total energy is preserved as a shock wave passes through a medium, the available energy which can be extracted as work is decreased, and entropy is increased, as some of the energy is transformed from kinetic energy into heat. --Coppertwig 16:19, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
Great more explanations
[edit]First let me refer to what said before.
- I realise that finding the shock angle (beta) from the standard equation: $
tan\theta=2cot\beta\frac{M_1^2sin^2\beta-1}{M_1^2\left(\gamma+cos2\beta\right)+2} $ is an iterative problem. I'm sorry but that absolutely doesn't require years of PhD research. And this is the equation which is being referred to in NACA1135. There is simply no convient way of expressing beta accurately as a function of theta. Nevertheless finding beta if theta is known isn't rocket science.
Here my reply:
Great, looking at the math is the only way to explain and understand the physical situation. Yes, this equation explains the oblique shock and has to be solved. Very smart people tries for years to find an analytical solution for it [see for example, "Approximation for weak and strong oblique shock wave angles" Agnone, Anthony M. (Hofstra Univ., Hempstead, NY) AIAA Journal 1994 0001-1452 vol.32 no.7 (1543-1545)]. If you try to solve this equation using the iterations method, you will discoverer that there are six solutions (three pairs) of sometimes complex numbers. You will encounter many problems. People suggested to use the shock polar method instead (see for the code http://www.caselab.okstate.edu/codes.html#oblique). Yet, I will like to learn about your new experience. Nevertheless, there are many calculators on the net that use the cumbersome method of the polar shock (see for example, Shapiro's book for explanations). Later, Emmanuel (McGraw-Hill Companies, Mathematical Theory of Compressible Fluid Flow) suggested a partial solution. Then, Bar-Meir's solution came which is the analytical solution. What so nice about Bar-Meir's solution isn't that it is easily allow to carry the calculations but that it provides the mathematical explanation for the detached shock. The fact remains, that finding a solution to this equation was essential part of the understanding of the oblique shock. This understanding can be achieved by utilizing Bar-Meir's solution (which is described in chapter 14 in
"Fundamentals of Compressible Flow" book www.potto.org).
- Here's a link to the above-mentioned book and to its chapter 14. I don't know where exactly in chapter 14 to find the solution referred to; I think the chapter solves more than one problem. --Coppertwig 15:52, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
In a summary, there are essentially three methods (some mathematicians suggest other methods which are much more complex) known today to solve this equation: 1) shock polar 2) Emmanuel 3)Bar-Meir. Bar-Meir's solution is the only one that provides an explanation to detach shock.
- While I'm not necessarily disagreeing with your summary of the state of the art, I think that ignoring the standard theory in favour of any other theory is not advantageous in a general use encyclopaedia. I wouldn't have any particular problem with a page in which the Bar-Meier theory of oblique shocks is explained (But you would probably have to convince someone else to write it to evade WP:NOR). Just as a general comment: I have seen a number of simplified shock solutions and most fail my tests on one of the following grounds:
- Ideal gas only
- Inviscid only
- Adiabatic wall only
- Homogeneous inflow only
- Significantly more complicated than the "standard" method, while not offering significant gains in accuracy.
- And for these reasons it is very difficult for any new theory to replace the standard theory, even for experts. I'm not opposed to putting your theory in wikipedia because I think that it's wrong (I haven't made any attempt to assess its correctness), I'm opposed because it's not the "standard" theory. Additionally the equation above is soluble and gives reasonable answers for the vast majority of oblique shocks. If you say that your theory extends the results of the old theory I might agree (If your theory is correct), but that doesn't make the standard theory wrong. AKAF 10:08, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
There is an improvement in the article. More suggestions, move the "Soliton" issues to analogy section. Most people never have heard about this term. Even fluid mechanics guys don't use this term (only mathematicians are using ). Change the word "sudden" in third sentence to abrupt or abrupt and sudden. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Genick (talk • contribs) 18:30, 5 February 2007 (UTC). Yes, forgot to sign Genick Bar-Meir, --potto 18:35, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
- I think soliton belongs here an an example of a nonlinear wave. I'd venture to say that quite a lot of people have heard of solitons, even if they don't know exactly what they are. The word soliton is used at least in optics, but I'm not aware of another word for soliton, could you let me know if you find another one? AKAF 10:08, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- I had heard of solitons. Besides, there's an explanation in parentheses and a link to a Wikipedia page on them, so it's not very bad if some readers don't know the word already. --Coppertwig 16:01, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
Difference between stationary shock and moving shock
[edit]Many askedme about the difference, the main difference, beside the mathematical complications, is the fact that stagnation temperature is constant in stationary shock while it changes in the moving shock. I hope that remove all the confusion in point. Genick--potto 19:10, 5 February 2007 (UTC) genick --potto 19:11, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
- I think that stationary shock is the same as moving shock seen from a particular moving reference frame. I think the temperatures are approximately the same from all the relevant reference frames; I don't think we're talking about relativistic velocities here. (i.e. the velocity of the reference frame is not large enough to significantly bring in effects such as red-shifting.) So, the pattern of temperature should be the same in the two kinds of shock. However, a particle in one reference frame can remain in the unshocked part of the medium, while a particle in a different reference frame will encounter the shock and undergo change. So the situation as a whole is the same, but the way it's experienced by particular reference points can be different. If I've missed some important point, please explain it. Has a definition of "stationary shock" been given? Has an example of stationary shock been described? --Coppertwig 10:16, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- Coppertwig's certainly convinced me that he's right (see his arguments about stationary shocks further up). I'm still convinced though that standing shock should be treated as a special case of a shock wave, much in the same way as a standing wave is generally treated as a special case of a linear wave. To be honest though, I'm not too sure myself of how one distinguishes an attached shock, a detached shock, a transonic recompression shock, a standing shock in internal flow caused by pressure ratio and a nozzle recompression shock such that a lay reader will see a clear difference of type. AKAF 10:27, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- The stagnation temperatures for moving shock are different for earth frame of reference. I remember that years ago I struggle with this issue. Check Shapiro's book on moving shock. I believe that is in chapter 4 or my book chapter 5. The creation of different stagnation temperatures easily can be shown by the math but the hand waving we explain this by all kind of discussions. But the point is, that in the end the stagnation temperature change. You can check the math for a very simple case of complete open valve (I believe that is Shapiro's book (my book have all the cases) deals with it. One of the way to deal with it to except it and than your intuition will accept it, like many other "strange" that occur in compressible flow. Many book even do not deal with shock-choke case (limit for open valve moving shock) because of this strange situation.
Genick --potto 17:08, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- Would you please explain some things so I can understand your statement The stagnation temperatures for moving shock are different for earth frame of reference? Let's assume we're talking about a shock wave propagating outwards from an explosion into air that is stationary to start with. That's a kind of "moving shock" according to the article. I don't know what "stagnation temperature" means. It sounds like the temperature of the air when it isn't moving; that is, the temperature before the shock goes past, and the temperature a long time after the shock goes past. I think you're saying that each of these temperatures is different for the earth frame of reference than for some other frame of reference. What other frame of reference? I think you're claiming that some air, which is not moving in the earth frame of reference, is at one temperature in the earth frame of reference and at another temperature in some other frame of reference. I'm not convinced of that. I think, as I argue above, that the temperatures are essentially the same in all the relevant (non-relativistic) frames of reference. I could be wrong about that. Maybe the velocities involved are high enough that the temperature has to be considered to be different just because the material is moving. If you put some air in a jar and set it on a stationary table, and then you move past it at supersonic speed, do you have to consider the temperature of the air in the jar to be higher than it's measured to be in the stationary reference frame? I don't think so but I'm not quite sure. I suppose the average velocity of each molecule of air will be higher, because of the relative motion, but I'm not sure that this qualifies as a higher temperature. --Coppertwig 22:55, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- Wait, maybe it does. I just looked at the temperature page and it says something about the average kinetic energy of the molecules of a gas. It doesn't actually state that the average kinetic energy is the definition of temperature, though, and I don't think it is.
- Genick, please comment. --23:03, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- To clarify, in a flow there are several frames of reference. The "static" values (generally pressure and temperature) refer to the pressure in the ground reference frame. The pressure of the air outside an aircraft for example. The "total" values refer to what the gas condition would be if it was accelerated in an isentropic manner to the speed of the aircraft. In subsonic flows these are the same values as those measured by a Pitot probe. In supersonic flow, due to the losses over the normal shock the Pitot pressure is less than the total pressure. Additional to both of these are the "stagnation" values which are not strictly defined, but which might be measured for a particular geometry at a position where the flow is at zero velocity in a convenient frame. Examples might be the pressure in a rocket combustion chamber or on the tip of a blunt body. Because the total pressure includes both the kinetic energy of the body and the gas properties, it is a measure of the work which can be extracted from a gas. Additionally you'll see that by definition if we change the frame of reference, the total values will change.AKAF 08:13, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
Order of examples of shock
[edit]I suggest re-ordering the examples of shock to put the ones that are easier to understand or more common first, as well as grouping together similar ones. I suggest this order:
- Shock propagating into a stationary medium
- Detached shock on a supersonic body
- Attached shock on a supersonic body
- Re-compression shock on a transonic body
- Shock in a pipe flow
- Detonation wave
Alternatively, detonation wave could be moved into second place, since it has similarities to the shock propagating into a stationary medium. I put it last because it involves chemical change, making it different from all the rest. --Coppertwig 15:39, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- I'm good with that. Go to it!AKAF 15:44, 6 February 2007 (UTC) Nice picture by the way, I had hoped that it was in the public domain somewhere!AKAF 15:57, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks, and thanks! I searched at commons:Special:Newimages for "supersonic". (Apparently the "newimages" search actually searches all the images, if I understand correctly, though I think it only searches on the filenames; there are other searches you can do.) My understanding is that if a picture is in Commons, then it's OK to link to it. I encourage others to search; there may be some other useful pictures there. Recompression shock and oblique shock could use helpful pictures or diagrams.
- DONE. I reordered the examples. --Coppertwig 16:07, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
This categorizing isn't reasonable. the first one is normal shock. The second one is 3-D shock. The fifth one is again normal shock. The last one is simple case of shock with chemical reaction. More reasonable approach is to
- normal shock (including moving shock)
- oblique shock (because (different place of "living")
- 3-D shock (general case, which include detached shocks)
- magnetohydro shocks which are different.
There is no difference between the external shock or internal shock (in pipe) on the location they occurs. Genick--potto 17:19, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- I would not support this ordering. I think generally that categorising shock waves is something better avoided and that this list should be of examples rather than categorisations. I think, for example, that the transonic recompression is an extremely common example, and so should be on any list of examples, but it's certainly not intuitively the same as the shock in a shock tube. Additionally I don't agree with your ordering (if it matters). I'd rather avoid getting into a discussion of why at this time. AKAF 17:36, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- As currently appearing in the article, the pipe flow and transonic shocks are difficult to read and understand. My main purpose in re-ordering was to move these further down and have some easier-to-understand examples first. One reason the pipe flow example is difficult to understand is that it mentions oblique shock without explaining it in any way that allows the reader to form an image in their mind (unless they already have knowledge about it). It would be good to have an example called "oblique shock" and explain it more fully, preferably with a diagram, as well as putting a link to the oblique shock page, rather than throwing "oblique shock" in parentheses at the helpless reader. :-)
- I would not support this ordering. I think generally that categorising shock waves is something better avoided and that this list should be of examples rather than categorisations. I think, for example, that the transonic recompression is an extremely common example, and so should be on any list of examples, but it's certainly not intuitively the same as the shock in a shock tube. Additionally I don't agree with your ordering (if it matters). I'd rather avoid getting into a discussion of why at this time. AKAF 17:36, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- Since the 5th one, pipe flow, mentions oblique shock, I don't understand your comment that it is "normal shock". I don't understand "different place of living".
- I think I prefer the ordering I put them in, but some other orders could be OK. I don't quite understand when you say "3D"; I think all these situations are 3D. I think the shock wave is generally not a plane wave but has curvature (as in spherical expansion from an explosion). A plane wave could be seen as 1D I suppose because of symmetry. You could present some proposed text here, describing magnetohydro shocks and/or combining some types of shocks as you describe above; I think it's probably best to keep the examples separate and not combine them. I don't know what magnetohydro shocks are but I'm curious and they might make a nice additional example. I think it's good if the "examples" cover all or almost all types of shocks, serving roughly as a categorization as well as being examples. However, maybe we shouldn't have an extremely large number of examples, either. --Coppertwig 18:23, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- Now I'm confused who is replying to whom with agreement or otherwise :-). For clarity, I agree with what coppertwig has done.AKAF 08:01, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
Readability in Shock waves in supersonic flows section
[edit]I find the first paragraph of this section difficult to read. Some readers will quit and go and read another article instead at this point. It may be better to move that first paragraph further down into the section; the rest of the section is much more readable. Alternatively, this first paragraph can be edited to be more easily readable.
This is the difficult part: The method of compression of a gas results in different temperatures and densities for a given pressure ratio, which can be analytically calculated for a non-reacting gas. A shock wave compression results in a loss of total pressure, meaning that it is a less efficient method of compressing gases for some purposes, for instance in the intake of a scramjet. I just can't process this. Each phrase is understandable, and it all fits together grammatically, but after reading it I just have no idea what it just said. Even re-reading it more slowly I don't get any meaning out of it.
I think one of the problems is in this part: The method of compression of a gas results in different temperatures and densities for a given pressure ratio. Is this saying that when you change to a different method, then you get different temperatures and densities? Or is it saying that when you change the pressure ratio then you get different temperatures and densities? Or somehow both? Very confusing.
OK, I just now realized what "pressure ratio" means. Of course it must mean the ratio between the pressures on the two sides of the shock wave, e.g. in the balloon-bursting case. Since I didn't get that until several re-readings, possibly the average reader also needs a bit of help there, e.g. "the ratio of the pressures in front of and behind the shock wave" may be easier to read and form an image in the mind that just "pressure ratios" when the mind is already busy trying to figure out what the rest of the sentence had been trying to say.
The bit about getting different temperatures and densities seems less important and can be moved later in the section or later in the article. Mentioning the different types of compressions, e.g. isentropic and Prandtl-Meyer, may be important to mention very close to the beginning so that readers who are actually interested in those can quickly get to the right page, but different temperatures and densities can be moved later if it can't be made readable enough.
I think I would find this easier to understand, if this is what's meant: For a given type of compression, the temperatures and densities can be expressed analytically as a function of the ratio of the pressures in front of and behind the shock wave, if it's assumed that there are no chemical reactions in the gas. Or put "for a non-reacting gas" in parentheses after "analytically". Still too complicated for the first paragraph, though.
One of my problems is that I don't think of a shock wave as a "method" but as a phenomenon. Sometimes they're not being used by humans for anything -- they just happen. Another problem is that I can't imagine how a compression can result in a loss of total pressure -- that sounds contradictory. Is "compression" being used in a different sense from the ordinary word? (I almost said "normal word"!! :-)
Also I admit to never having heard of a "scramjet" as far as I remember (though I have heard of solitons!). I'm reading about "shock wave" and imagining a disturbance in gas moving outwards from an explosion or propagating like a plane wave through some gas, and suddenly scramjets are mentioned which I assume are some sort of airplane engine thing and bring a totally different image into my mind (or attempt to -- I don't know where exactly in an airplane engine you would find a shock wave.) That sudden shift in images is one of the reasons it's difficult to read. Perhaps the scramjet could be mentioned somewhere in the article where there's enough room to describe the phenomenon well enough to build a clear picture in the reader's mind.
I think shock waves can happen in liquids too and that the article needs to acknowledge this.
I hope these comments are helpful. I might suggest more specific edits later after thinking it over and/or after getting feedback on this. --Coppertwig 16:58, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- I'm all for it. As I've previously said, I'm not wedded to any of this specifically (You can look in the article history section to see what the article looked like before I had a bash).
- Just to explain: One of the concepts which I was trying for, which is kind of important is why people try to make shockless supersonic bodies. This is because (Entropy increases/total pressure decreases) across a shock, which means that the work which can be re-extracted from the gas is reduced, causing drag. Thus there is a lot of discussion of shockless engine inlets/forebodies in order to reduce drag. In the case of an engine, if the pressure in the combustion chamber assumed constant, and the flight conditions are identical; the temperature in the combustion chamber will be higher in the case where the compression is by shocks than for an isentropic inlet, and the drag will be higher (or net thrust lower). The concept "Shocks cause drag" is one of the main reasons which shocks are studied in aerodynamics (Another being surface heating effects).AKAF 17:53, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
You are right
[edit]This was in my previous suggetion. The equation of state (gases, liqueds, and solids) have comcompressibility and therefore shock wave occurs there. Genick --potto 17:23, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- If you mean me, thank you. I inserted a mention of solids, liquids and gases into the first sentence of the article. If someone can find a place to fit them in more smoothly, be bold and move them -- but I think the mention should occur somewhere before "gas" is first mentioned in a way that might imply all shock waves are in gases. Maybe we need an example of a solid or liquid shock in the examples section? --Coppertwig 18:41, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
Mach's picture of a bullet
[edit]In the article "oblique shock", it says " The first to discover this shock was Ernst Mach in his original picture showing a bullet in a supersonic flow that cause the oblique shock.". I wonder whether this is talking about the same picture I inserted into this article, and if so, whether the statement can be verified and whether the picture needs a more complete caption and whether it's misleading the way it is now. I assumed the picture was simply a bullet moving at supersonic speed through (motionless) air. Or maybe I'm misunderstanding the use of the word "flow" on that page. --Coppertwig 18:05, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- As far as I remember, Mach shot his bullet into stationary air, and as the bullet parted a thin wire, the flash for the photo was triggered. You can see his trigger wires on the photo.AKAF 18:21, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
- That makes sense and agrees with the brief info provided with the picture. Probably I just didn't understand how the word "flow" was being used on the oblique shock page. --Coppertwig 23:53, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
"the flow"
[edit]Actually, I find the word "flow" confusing in this article, too. It says "the flow" and I'm thinking, what flow? Flow hasn't been described or defined in this context. The word "flow" at the end of the intro seems fine, but "shock waves in supersonic flow" -- what's that about? Maybe it would be better to introduce the idea of aircraft in the header or first sentence of this section -- it all might make more sense, including the use of "method" rather than "phenomenon". But method of compression? What is the reason why an aircraft designer would want to compress something? A little info needs to be given here for motivation. Is this compression under the wing for the purpose of creating lift, or is this compression at the nose of the plane which can't be avoided but which will be handled by one method or another? Or is it compression in the engine? If it's in the engine, a description or picture needs to be given so the reader knows the basic geometry of a reasonable (very simple) example, i.e. where is this shock wave?
The way it stands now, when I see "shock waves in supersonic flow" I imagine a medium travelling at supersonic speed and also having a shock wave propagating through it -- not an easy image to form in the mind, and then it turns out not to be what the section is really talking about anyway, apparently, or it isn't clear whether it is or not.
Hopefully when we're done the ideas in this article will "flow" nicely :-) --Coppertwig 18:58, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
Much of what I write below is intended as questions to be answered, in the article, by people who know the subject and who may not realize that certain things obvious to them have to be explained to the reader. I may not know the answers myself.
I think maybe I see the problem: maybe much of the article was written by people accustomed to using wind tunnels, where "the flow" obviously refers to the flow of air through the wind tunnel, and they're just accustomed to saying "the flow" without needing to specify what flow they're talking about or even mentioning a wind tunnel since they use them all the time. But the average reader will tend to be thinking of an airplane moving through stationary air rather than a stationary model of an airplane in "the flow" in a wind tunnel, so when the reader sees "the flow" the reader thinks "what flow?". Or at least I do. In a given situation, there may be several velocities of gas involved in different parts of the system, so the article needs to specify what flow is being referred to. Even if there's only one flow I still think it needs to be defined. This applies to:
- The heading "shock wave in supersonic flow"
- First and last sentence of first paragraph of that section, except that defining it in one place might cover for some of the others. Would it be accurate to change the flow in the last sentence to the flow of air around the aircraft?
- Third paragraph of that section: sound waves travelling against the flow Again, what flow? A situation has been set up with two regions of gas travelling at two velocities (implied by the word "change"). Is the flow the velocity of one of the regions? Which one? Are they both necessarily moving in the same direction?
- First example of shock wave (moving shock): The shock propagates with a wave front which is normal (at right angles) to the direction of flow. What flow? How about changing "the flow" here to "the direction of propagation of the shock wave"? Or to "the direction of flow of material just behind the shock wave"? (or "...in the shock wave"?)
- they stand at 90 degrees to the oncoming flow in the example of detached shock. How about changing this to "the direction of motion of the body" (preferred) or "the direction of the oncoming flow as seen from the moving reference frame of the body"?
- The following sentence: Detached shocks allow the same type of analytic calculations as for the attached shock, for the flow near the shock. Here, does the analytic solution provide a single velocity for "the flow", or does it provide a function from position and time to velocity, specifying the velocity of motion of the gas at each point in space at each point in time?
- In Attached shock: inviscid flow field -- again, is the writer imagining a wind tunnel? If so, maybe the writer should let the reader in on that secret. :-) Oh, does "flow" here mean "the specification of the velocity at each point in time and space"? So it's not implying that the gas is necessarily moving. Maybe the words "flow field" could simply be deleted here; I think all it's really saying is that the gas is inviscid. It could say "for an inviscid gas (zero viscosity, no loss of energy due to friction within the gas)".
- Also in Attached shock: at 90 degrees to the oncoming flow -- here "flow" does seem to be implying a single velocity. Again, implying a wind tunnel?
- In the transonic section: These shocks appear when the flow over a transonic body is decelerated to subsonic speeds. It hasn't said wind tunnel. It says "transonic body" so apparently the body is moving, perhaps through originally stationary air. It says the flow is decelerated. Presumably the body itself continues at the same transonic speed, while something changes about the flow of air around it as it moves? If the body itself decelerates, it should say so. I suspect confusion here about whether a wind tunnel is being talked about or not.
- Also in the transonic section: Where the flow over the suction side of a transonic wing is accelerated to a supersonic speed, the resulting re-compression can be by either Prandtl-Meyer compression or by the formation of a normal shock.. Flow as seen from which reference frame? This needs to be specified in order to determine whether the flow is at supersonic speed. Also, I'd like to know where the normal shock is. A picture or figure would help. But it can be told in words: is it behind the wing? At what angle? Is the shock wave front usually mostly vertical, or mostly horizontal? Is it usually huge compared to the size of the wing? Does it tend to extend far upwards or downwards from the aircraft? I just have very little idea of where this shock wave would be, and I'm not comfortable seeing it mentioned when I can't imagine what it looks like. Describing a typical example of the geometry here would be helpful.
- (pipe flow and supersonic flow in a pipe: These are obvious and don't need to be explained.)
Or maybe in the Terminology section it can say "In this article, the flow refers to ..."
Mach's picture was taken on arm rotating around
[edit]That was so amasing about that picture is timing. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Genick (talk • contribs) 20:38, 6 February 2007 (UTC).
- So that the camera would be moving at about the same angular velocity as the bullet? --Coppertwig 23:55, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
On expansion fan being negative step
[edit]It is not possible to have an expansion process through a step function (refer Impossibility of expanding a flow through a single "shock" wave). The following comment regarding this
Shock waves are characterized by an abrupt change (a discontinuity) in the characteristics of the medium (such as pressure or temperature) as a positive step function. The corresponding negative step is an expansion wave.
is not correct and should not be included in the article. I had removed the statement earlier, but it was inserted back with the following summary,
... PM gives step at surface ...
I still hold that it is incorrect. Saying that Prandtl-Meyer expansion fan has negative step in pressure at the surface is incorrect. The reason being, one can never have infinitely sharp corners. All corners when zoomed in are rounded. The expansion fan never starts of as a singularity. Even otherwise,
- Just one point in the field does not clarify assign a label of negative-step function to an expansion process.
- The fact that they are called expansion fan and not expansion shock implicitly states the fact there is no jump in the flow properties.
I may be wrong, but in that case, please provide a reference where it states that expansion wave is a negative step function. I have never come across one. Thank you. -Myth (Talk) 03:43, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
- Would you agree that the first sentence of the two sentences you quoted is OK? Could you provide a suggested alternative wording? Should we simply delete the second of the two sentences? It would be good to be able to say something like "A sudden decrease in pressure is an expansion wave, though it can never propagate as a step function the way a sudden increase does." (Perhaps someone can improve on the wording.) But I think we should have a reference before being able to say something like that. --Coppertwig 14:09, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
I agree with the statements regarding the shock waves. I just don't think that it is correct to give a reader an impression that expansion can be achieved through a step function. IMO the word shock is in general used to describe sudden changes in a state. If expansion was possible then we would have the names expansion shock and compression shock (similar to isentropic compression and expansion). We do not use shock expansion, because it is implicitly assumed that a shock causes compression. Instead of,
Shock waves are characterized by an abrupt change (a discontinuity) in the characteristics of the medium (such as pressure or temperature) as a positive step function. The corresponding negative step is an expansion wave.
we can say something like,
- Shock waves are characterized by an abrupt change (a discontinuity) in the characteristics of the medium. Across a shock there is always an abrupt rise in pressure, temperature and density of the flow. However, it is not possible to have a decrease in these properties across a shock wave. ref In supersonic flows expansion is achieved through an expansion fan.
I have tried to avoid mentioning about the step function for it can be avoided. If you have a good command over English and have a better suggestion please go ahead. -Myth (Talk) 03:34, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
- I'm good with this. I wanted to get in a link to expansion wave so that the shock wave/expansion wave pairing would be made. I actually managed to misunderstand your problem with this (that it's not a mathematical step function). Sorry. AKAF 10:44, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
- Your English in this suggested wording is perfect, Myth. Be bold and put it into the article. --Coppertwig 11:55, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
I have made the appropriate changes. Just wanted to confirm, so that we don't waste time on revert wars. Thanks. -Myth (Talk) 14:54, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
Difference between Prandtl-Meyer compression and isentropic compression
[edit]Can someone please tell me the difference between a Prandtl-Meyer compression and other type of isentropic compression ? -Myth (Talk) 04:37, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
To the question above.
There is no difference between them.
genick --potto 17:03, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
- Myth, Sorry I missed this comment. For the compression, you'll get the same values of pressure for each, and in fact (Prandtl-Meyer)/(isentropic)/(Mach wave)/(finite wave) compression are used almost interchangeably. In supersonic flow, it's a useful thought aid though, since, much as the Prangtl-Meyer expansion describes a flow topology, so does a finite wave compression describe how the effect of a change in wall topology is propogated into the flow (ie at the Mach angle). AKAF 18:00, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks for the reply. I had raised that question because in the section Shock waves in supersonic flows it is mentioned that
I was not clear on what the second statement was meant for. It seems to imply that there are different types of isentropic compressions and Prandtl-Meyer compression is one of them. That brings me to the question as to what are the other types of isentropic compressions ?The shock wave is one of several different ways in which a gas in a supersonic flow can be compressed. Some other methods are isentropic compressions, including Prandtl-Meyer compressions.
- Thanks for the reply. I had raised that question because in the section Shock waves in supersonic flows it is mentioned that
- Mathematically in 0d, there's only one state equation for an isentropic compression. The above are not really "types" of isentropic compression, in the sense that a different mathematical expression is used. Just as the Prandtl-Meyer expansion fan is a description of how the state changes with both (x,y) position (in 2d), supersonic compressions have both a position and a state change associated with them. That is to say that supersonic compressions in 2d cannot be accurately modelled by a 1-D pipe-flow assumption, since the positions of the compressions are delayed by a factor including the Mach number and the strength of the compression (in the sense that the shock angle and Mach angle are different). That said, I'm fine with removing this if you think that it's confusing, but I personally am always careful to think of supersonic conpressions/expansions as wave processes. Regards AKAF 08:06, 9 March 2007 (UTC).
Regarding the pressure-time diagram
[edit]First let me say that the article is much improvement over past. I have a comment on the figure of the step function. This figure is wrong. The pressure change but the change is constant and doesn't go the original pressure. genick --potto 17:03, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
- Hi Genick. Not too sure what you mean by the figure, could you elaborate? AKAF 18:00, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
I mean to the figure with the title: Pressure-time diagram at a point for a shock wave propagating past the observer
this figure call attention to the assumtion that the pressue increase during the shock but then is reduced to the original state which is wrong. The change is sharp and the pressure does not reduced to its original state. genick --potto 19:08, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
- The caption just mentions that the plot is for a shock wave propagating past an observer. In that case we can only see a rise in the pressure. It needs an expansion process to decrease the pressure which is not mentioned in the caption, though it is labeled in the figure. I guess we can just edit the caption to mention that a shock wave leads to a steep rise in pressure, where as an expansion fan decreases the pressure gradually.
- My take is that the figure was drawn for an object traveling at supersonic speed. This will lead to formation of shock wave in front of the object and expansion waves behind it. That will explain why the pressure drops. -- Myth (Talk) 22:05, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
- I think that I understand the confusion about the figure. There are two situations which this figure describes. The first one is of a explosion in which a shock wave increase the pressure and then the pressure is reduced. The second one is of a one dimensional moving shock in which the pressure stay the same. In the first case the increase occur over over several mean path length and the decrease in the pressure occur in larger time scale (expansion of the volume neglecting small other effects). Even in that case the figure has to be corrected. To correct the figure the front of the figure should remain the same but the back side should not have a sharp point and a larger time scale. If the second case is described then this figure is wrong. To over came this confusion it should be point out that the first case is described. I hope that my poor English was not obstacle in understanding the issue.--potto 16:53, 8 March 2007 (UTC) genick
Here's a suggestion for the new figure. -- Myth (Talk) 05:01, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
- I'm good with that figure. Mine, I'll be the first to admit, was a quick and dirty fix for an article without figures. AKAF 08:11, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
- Yes I think that is much better. I also think that a title with explanation that it refers to explosive or 3D shock is needed. Thanks for the work. It is nice.
Genick--potto 15:57, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
Krakatoa
[edit]The Krakatoa article says that there were shock waves that circled the earth 7 times. Were these really shock waves? They lasted for 5 days. Brallan 18:56, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
- The article suggests the furthest away the volcano was heard was Australia and India, about 1900 miles, what ever the article means by shockwave it almost certainly isn't what's talked about in this article. Perhaps it's referring to the tsunami? But given how the recent boxing day one travelled around the world 7 times is unlikely. Andrew.Ainsworth 20:34, 29 April 2007 (UTC)
Needs a lot more diagrams
[edit]We need some of those ripple diagrams showing how the ripples all bunch up and form the shockwave. I did a quick search to see if NASA had any good ones, but haven't found any yet.WolfKeeper 14:32, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
Review?
[edit]I'm not an expert, in this edit I tried to re-word to be a bit clearer and avoid self-reference. Could someone review it to make sure it's accurate still? WLU (talk) 15:52, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
"Prandtl-Glauert singularity" link add?
[edit]Hi,
There is a wiki entry Prandtl-Glauert singularity, which I think would be a better link than that to Herr Prandtl (in the singularity article the man's bio is linked).
I am not an engineer, so I do not know how to use the correct words to formulate the sentence referencing the link. The singularity article has some difficult parts, but is quite clear otherwise, I think, and gives good pictures and external links.
Best, Shlishke (talk) 00:05, 17 February 2008 (UTC)
Definition please
[edit]An expert please change the first sentence to a definition or as close to a definition as possible. Currently it reads "A shock wave ... is a type of propagating disturbance." This sounds like it could also apply to ordinary waves, and the Wave article agrees; so the sentence is too general. Is a shock wave a special type of wave? What are the defining characteristics of a shock wave? The "abrupt, nearly discontinuous change in the characteristics of the medium"? Or the "extremely rapid rise in pressure, temperature and density" of flow across the shock wave? -Pgan002 (talk) 01:51, 5 March 2008 (UTC)