Fluid Mechanics: Shock Waves (29 of 34)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 дек 2024

Комментарии • 48

  • @sebastianvargas864
    @sebastianvargas864 Год назад +3

    Most people in my school taking fluid mechanics know to just watch these videos and you'll be set. Very nicely done.

  • @maxthekid_33
    @maxthekid_33 Год назад +3

    Dr.John Biddle, your passion is communicative ... thank you for your enthusiasm and your work

  • @ahmedalnemr3282
    @ahmedalnemr3282 5 лет назад +15

    i have never ever complete an online-lecture but with this doctor i fail in love with fluid mechanics more. thanks

  • @DN-ps4bn
    @DN-ps4bn Год назад

    My alma mater creating beautiful concise videos. 🙏🏽

  • @nanodynamics5203
    @nanodynamics5203 7 месяцев назад

    Once upon a time, a guy made compressible flow looked easy
    Thanks Dr. Biddle

  • @noz4567
    @noz4567 5 месяцев назад

    I remember, when I was attending Air Force Academy. We studied a lot of Aerodynamics
    Those subjects are what I learned

  • @TurbochargedV8
    @TurbochargedV8 Год назад

    1:38
    Just a major correction, those are not shockwaves. Those are vapor cones. Shockwaves occur independently of weather conditions. Shockwaves can be seen on aircraft as distortions, like a crack in a glass

  • @PtiTwins
    @PtiTwins 3 года назад

    thanks for your lessons, it makes fluids easy

  • @sanjaydubey8929
    @sanjaydubey8929 5 лет назад +1

    awesome series, I like it most! content made simple and easy to understand! thanks for uploading. I like the whole 4 lecture on compressible flow. I think it cover all the imp content from the local fluid mechanics book!

  • @adkm222
    @adkm222 2 года назад +2

    I wish that I have this teacher

  • @emmanuelsansusthytardio5835
    @emmanuelsansusthytardio5835 5 лет назад

    Thank you Dr. Biddel! Great teaching!

  • @abdallahshaat2296
    @abdallahshaat2296 6 лет назад +4

    Well done! #CPPMechEng keep it up!

  • @uglyangel0720
    @uglyangel0720 3 года назад +1

    LOL, I like his humor at 23:48 about shocking shock wave

  • @eugeneeugene3313
    @eugeneeugene3313 10 месяцев назад

    This guy reminds me my good old professors, and I am not very young.

  • @vivekchaudharyiitguwahati3511
    @vivekchaudharyiitguwahati3511 4 года назад

    Nicely explained sir

  • @VARUN_SHUKLA_11
    @VARUN_SHUKLA_11 Год назад

    I'm doing a research project on
    Topic : Shock-wave - An introduction and application
    Sub Topic : Fluid Mechanics - TWO PHASE FLOWS
    how can I complete this "please suggest me Sir"

  • @richelkik2771
    @richelkik2771 4 года назад

    This man is great

  • @Helicopterpilot16
    @Helicopterpilot16 5 лет назад +2

    LOL, 55:00 I'm watching this to understand those "expansion shocks".

  • @exitlevel
    @exitlevel Год назад

    18:00 nintuition

  • @mohammednorai678
    @mohammednorai678 4 года назад

    Hello CPP MechEngTutorials, I need a help and the help is Can Dr. John Biddle explain to us the oblique shock wave and expansion wave in detail because I am living in UAE and we are taking Compressible fluid mechanics, so we need him, please?

  • @muhammadsalman5059
    @muhammadsalman5059 Год назад

    What textbook is being used for this course

  • @ahmadyousif5467
    @ahmadyousif5467 6 лет назад

    thanks

  • @Yamahog
    @Yamahog 4 года назад +1

    Awesome Lecture, John. thanks.... My peeve with all of this is,... Abbreviation for Mach is a Ma, not M..... Kelvins is K , not degrees K, same with Rankine, it's R, not degrees R..... Absolute scale = No degrees....... I shouldn't have to rag on about constants, but it is what it is. Please Relate Kelvin and Rankin as Kelvins and Rankins as absolute, not a tweak with degrees, so that the class doesn't look silly. Ohhh and BTW the isentropic index is referred to as Gamma . Yep...... not k
    which is k = kilo
    Stay safe

    • @hotshot56371
      @hotshot56371 2 года назад +1

      literally never seen Mach as anything but M

    • @hotshot56371
      @hotshot56371 2 года назад +1

      Ratio of specific heats is often k in mechanical engineering circles and gamma for aerospace engineers. I see both regularly. I agree about Kelvin and Rankine though

    • @Pwnulolumad
      @Pwnulolumad 3 месяца назад

      Damn bro respect your elders

    • @Yamahog
      @Yamahog 3 месяца назад

      @@hotshot56371 Sorry, I wasn't trying to tear a strip off of anyone, M could be mega, metres, miles or thousands,( if you think MBTU/hr, etc) Same for K could be kilo, Kelvin, . My point was, in thermodynamics Mach is Ma ,so that its not misconstrued in the answer as something else.
      Stay Safe.

  • @andyduong911
    @andyduong911 2 года назад

    Is this an undergrad or grad course?

  • @0alcoholism2
    @0alcoholism2 5 лет назад +6

    He's good at teaching but America, just use the metric system... please

  • @mwiingakabwata2166
    @mwiingakabwata2166 2 года назад

    Ok

  • @EBgCampos
    @EBgCampos 3 года назад +2

    I am disapointed he blantantly tells us not to try to understand it and just use the equations.

    • @andreafuligno8208
      @andreafuligno8208 2 года назад

      Yeah, that is really bad. Also, you can understand supersonic fluids so no point in discouraging people.

  • @mlungisichonco2196
    @mlungisichonco2196 2 года назад

    Shocking stuff hence it called shock waves😅

  • @noz4567
    @noz4567 5 месяцев назад

    I remember, when I was attending Air Force Academy. We studied a lot of Aerodynamics
    Those subjects are what I learned