Courses of Study 2011-2012 
    
    Apr 25, 2024  
Courses of Study 2011-2012 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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MAE 3230 - Introductory Fluid Mechanics


Fall. (Usually offered in summer through Engineering Cooperative Program) 4 credits.

Prerequisite: ENGRD 2020  and TAM 2030  and prerequisite or co-registration in ENGRD 2210 , or permission of instructor. Enrollment is limited to: ME majors and those officially registered for AE or ME minor.

Staff.

Topics include physical properties of fluids, hydrostatics, conservation laws using control volume analysis and using differential analysis, Bernoulli’s equation, potential flows, simple viscous flows (solved with Navier-Stokes equations), dimensional analysis, pipe flows, boundary layers. Introduction to compressible flow.

Outcome 1: Students will be able to use the fundamental principles and mathematical basis underlying the conservation equations.

Outcome 2: Be able to identify the guiding principles in a given fluid problem, to formulate the governing equations, and so to solve basic engineering problems.

Outcome 3: Recognize the difference between an ideal fluid and a viscous fluid, and to understand the limitations of the solutions for real practical fluid flows. Understand the difference between a simple solution and a real practical problem.

Outcome 4: Understand where their analysis might involve approximations and empirical approaches; for example, pipe flows and boundary layer flows.

Outcome 5: Have improved their ability to formulate an ordered approach to problem solving, using words of explanation in derivations, and algebra before substituting numerical values that allows neat analytical solutions and dimensional analysis.



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