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Question about J D Andersons CFD Introduction book |
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July 20, 2008, 05:49 |
Question about J D Andersons CFD Introduction book
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Hi,
I'm working through CFD: The Basics with Applications by J D Anderson in preparation to a CFD course later this year. But I'm a bit confused with two equations, numbers 5.9 and 5.13. They both have a partial derivative d^2/dn in them. Why is the dn part not dn^2? I don't know how to insert math characters but the 'd' are partial derivatives and n is the greek letter eta, used for an axis in the computational plane. Thanks. Please don't turn this topic into a discussion on peoples opinions of introductory level CFD books and their preferences. |
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