- #36
Delta2
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rcgldr said:My point is this, acceleration perpendicular to the flow (centripetal acceleration) of a streamline coexists with the pressure on the outer side of the streamline being greater than the pressure on the inner side of the streamline. This means the wing experiences more of a decrease in pressure above a wing and more of an increase in pressure below a wing than what Bernoulli would predict based on speeds alone.
Can you tell me where the derivation of Bernoulli's principle goes wrong in the case that perpendicular to the flow acceleration exists? i don't see anything wrong, the perpendicular acceleration produces no work.
The pressure gradient you speak of is in direction perpendicular to the streamline, not along the streamline.
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