The Fluid Catastrophe

· Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Ebook
193
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

By abandoning classical theory and adopting a liberating, empirical approach to fluid behaviour, this book sheds new light on Global Warming, on Ice Ages, why the wind makes waves bigger, and the origin of the Earth’s magnetic field. At heart, it is concerned with how meaning can be extracted from a sequence of measurements—time series analysis. The methods developed (plus Python code) will appeal to both the graduate student and the data analyst.

The “Ultraviolet Catastrophe”, the failure to account for black-body radiation, led to quantum mechanics. Another catastrophe was politely ignored and fluid dynamics remained trapped in the nineteenth century. The book outlines a solution to this dilemma. It will appeal to those interested in the philosophy of science and, more specifically, to those interested in understanding the great unsolved mystery of fluid dynamics: turbulence.

About the author

John Reid conducted PhD research on the physics of the aurora under G.R.A. Ellis, during which he discovered a new auroral phenomenon, cosmic noise absorption pulsations. For most of his professional life he was employed by government science organizations with occasional forays into high-tech startups in fields such as speech recognition and video surveillance.

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