Viscosity denotes opposition to flow.
permanent deformation in non crystalline materials is due to viscous flow or localized slip! deformation depends on glass transition temperature.
no it cant
I dont know but i like cake do u
A lava flow flows as a viscous liquid, rather like molasses only thicker. A pyroclastic flow is a mixture of ash, gas, and rock fragments and is not significantly affected by viscous forces that would slow it down. It moves like an avalanche or thunderstorm downburst rather than a liquid.
Viscosity is a fluid's resistance to flow. Fluids becomes less viscous as the liquid's temperature increases, becoming more viscous as the fluid gets cooler. A viscous fluid is sticky, thick and syrupy to a greater or lesser extent. Examples Treacle is quite viscous, but water is not. Hot engine oil is less viscous ('thinner') and runs more quickly and smoothly than cold engine oil.
it mean that it can not be compressed
incompressible fluid laminar viscous flow non reactive fluid single phase
incompressible fluid laminar viscous flow non reactive fluid single phase
permanent deformation in non crystalline materials is due to viscous flow or localized slip! deformation depends on glass transition temperature.
Non-viscous is a scientific term that refers to the pouring characteristic of a liquid. A non-viscous liquid is one that pours thinly, with minimal bulging, drop formation or trailing string formation. An example of a non-viscous liquid would be alcohol; a viscous liquid (the opposite) would be maple syrup.
Viscosity is a measurement of how much a liquid resists flow or deformation -- viscous liquids tend to move more slowly than non-viscous liquids. An example of a highly viscous liquid might be honey or molasses; vinegar and water have low viscosity.
Stock's flow means a slow flow of very viscous liquid when non-linear inertia's component can be neglected with respect to the value of friction force in the liquid. Re<<1
If a fluid in laminar flow flows around an obstacle, it exerts a viscous drag on the obstacle. Frictional forces accelerate the fluid backward (against the direction of flow) and the obstacle forward (in the direction of flow). The viscous drag force increases linearly with the speed of the fluid.
Blood is viscous, as it contains a hugely populous density of red blood cells therefore making it viscous. A comparison would be to water, which is less than 3 times as viscous as blood, as it contains around less than 3 times the amount of molecules than in blood.
no it cant
Viscous flux usually refers to laminar flow. In most contexts, it refers to something like creeping flow or Poiseuille flow. Viscous flus usually arises from an external body force acting on a fluid. The external body force is usually pressure, or in some instances, centripetal force or magnetism.
R. C. Buggeln has written: 'Computation of multi-dimensional viscous supersonic flow' -- subject(s): Viscous flow, Navier-Stokes equations