The flow induced by a sphere which undergoes unsteady motion in a Newtonian
fluid at small Reynolds number is considered at distances large compared with
sphere radius a. Previous solutions of the unsteady Oseen equations (Ockendon
1968; Lovalenti & Brady 1993b) for rectilinear motion are refined. Three-dimensional
Fourier transforms of the disturbance field are integrated over Fourier space to derive
new concise equations for the velocity field and history force in terms of single history
integrals.
Various slip-velocity profiles are classified by the ratio A of the particle relative displacement,
z′p(t′) −
z′p(τ′), to the diffusion length,
l′D = 2[v(t′ − τ′)]1/2,
where v is the kinematic viscosity of the fluid. Most previous studies are concerned with large-displacement
motions for which the ratio is large in the long-time limit. It is shown
using asymptotic calculations that the flow at any point at large distance z past a
sphere for arbitrary large-displacement and non-reversing motion is the same as the
steady-state laminar wake if z is expressed in terms of the time elapsed since the
particle was at that point in the laboratory frame. The point source solution for the
remainder of the far flow is also valid for the unsteady case.
A start-up motion with slip velocity V′p
= γ′(t′)−1/2, t′ > 0, is investigated for which A
is finite. A self-similar solution for the flow field is obtained in terms of space coordinates scaled by the diffusion
length, u′ = auss(η)/t′ where
η = r′/2(vt′)1/2. The
unsteady Oseen correction to the drag is inversely proportional to time.
When A is small in the long-time limit (a small-displacement motion) the flow
field also depends on the space coordinates in terms of η. The distribution of the
streamwise velocity uz is symmetrical in z.