Expansion wave: Difference between revisions
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<div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">( | <div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">(''Also called'' rarefaction wave.) A [[simple wave]] or progressive [[disturbance]] in the [[isentropic]] flow of a compressible fluid, such that the [[pressure]] and [[density]] of a fluid [[particle]] decrease on crossing the wave in the direction of its motion.</div><br/> <div class="paragraph">This may be illustrated, for example, by the withdrawal of a piston from a gas-filled cylinder. When the gas is initially at rest in the cylinder, an expansion wave may move into the undisturbed fluid at the [[speed of sound]] as the piston is withdrawn. The expansion wave is a finite-amplitude disturbance changing shape as it propagates, but it may or may not be accompanied by a [[shock wave|shock wave]] front, with the associated discontinuities. <br/>''See'' [[compression wave|compression wave]].</div><br/> </div> | ||
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Latest revision as of 16:56, 25 April 2012
expansion wave
(Also called rarefaction wave.) A simple wave or progressive disturbance in the isentropic flow of a compressible fluid, such that the pressure and density of a fluid particle decrease on crossing the wave in the direction of its motion.
This may be illustrated, for example, by the withdrawal of a piston from a gas-filled cylinder. When the gas is initially at rest in the cylinder, an expansion wave may move into the undisturbed fluid at the speed of sound as the piston is withdrawn. The expansion wave is a finite-amplitude disturbance changing shape as it propagates, but it may or may not be accompanied by a shock wave front, with the associated discontinuities.
See compression wave.
See compression wave.