Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 A simple model of fluid mechanics
- 2 Two routes to hydrodynamics
- 3 Inviscid two-dimensional lattice-gas hydrodynamics
- 4 Viscous two-dimensional hydrodynamics
- 5 Some simple three-dimensional models
- 6 The lattice-Boltzmann method
- 7 Using the Boltzmann method
- 8 Miscible fluids
- 9 Immiscible lattice gases
- 10 Lattice-Boltzmann method for immiscible fluids
- 11 Immiscible lattice gases in three dimensions
- 12 Liquid-gas models
- 13 Flow through porous media
- 14 Equilibrium statistical mechanics
- 15 Hydrodynamics in the Boltzmann approximation
- 16 Phase separation
- 17 Interfaces
- 18 Complex fluids and patterns
- Appendix A Tensor symmetry
- Appendix B Polytopes and their symmetry group
- Appendix C Classical compressible flow modeling
- Appendix D Incompressible limit
- Appendix E Derivation of the Gibbs distribution
- Appendix F Hydrodynamic response to forces at fluid interfaces
- Appendix G Answers to exercises
- Author Index
- Subject Index
15 - Hydrodynamics in the Boltzmann approximation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 A simple model of fluid mechanics
- 2 Two routes to hydrodynamics
- 3 Inviscid two-dimensional lattice-gas hydrodynamics
- 4 Viscous two-dimensional hydrodynamics
- 5 Some simple three-dimensional models
- 6 The lattice-Boltzmann method
- 7 Using the Boltzmann method
- 8 Miscible fluids
- 9 Immiscible lattice gases
- 10 Lattice-Boltzmann method for immiscible fluids
- 11 Immiscible lattice gases in three dimensions
- 12 Liquid-gas models
- 13 Flow through porous media
- 14 Equilibrium statistical mechanics
- 15 Hydrodynamics in the Boltzmann approximation
- 16 Phase separation
- 17 Interfaces
- 18 Complex fluids and patterns
- Appendix A Tensor symmetry
- Appendix B Polytopes and their symmetry group
- Appendix C Classical compressible flow modeling
- Appendix D Incompressible limit
- Appendix E Derivation of the Gibbs distribution
- Appendix F Hydrodynamic response to forces at fluid interfaces
- Appendix G Answers to exercises
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
In this chapter we give a full derivation of the Navier-Stokes equation for the lattice gas. The first step, the Boltzmann approximation, is an approximation of the exact Liouville dynamics. The Boltzmann approximation should not be confused with the lattice-Boltzmann method of Chapter 6 and Chapter 7, but results that we obtain here for the Boltzmann approximation and the Navier-Stokes equations are also useful for the Boltzmann method. One of these results is the H-theorem for lattice gases. In this chapter we also reopen the tricky issue of the spurious invariants of lattice-gas or Boltzmann dynamics. We specifically discuss non-uniform global linear invariants for which, unlike the general nonlinear invariants, some theoretical results are known. Among them we find the staggered momentum invariants. We discuss their effect on hydrodynamics, which leads us to corrections to the Euler equation of Chapter 2.
General Boolean dynamics
It is useful to express the Boolean dynamics as a sequence of Boolean calculations, as we did in Section 2.6. In this section we shall denote by s or n local configurations. We further define a field of “rate bits”, which are random, Boolean variables, defined independently on each site and denoted by ass′(x, t). They are equal to one with probability 〈ass′〉 = A(s, s′). Thus if the pre-collision configuration is n the post-collision configuration is that single s′ for which ans′ = 1.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Lattice-Gas Cellular AutomataSimple Models of Complex Hydrodynamics, pp. 184 - 202Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997