CONVECTIVE DERIVATIVE

(Redirected from Substantive derivative)
The 'convective derivative' (also commonly known as the 'advective derivative', 'substantive derivative', or the 'material derivative') is a derivative taken with respect to a coordinate system moving with velocity 'u', and is often used in fluid mechanics and classical mechanics.
phi is a scalar valued function of stationary spatial coordinates.
'v' is a vector valued function of stationary spatial coordinates.
The 'convective derivative' is defined as:
: rac{Dphi}{Dt} = rac{partial phi}{partial t} + (mathbf{u}cdot
abla)phi
: rac{Dmathbf{v}}{Dt} = rac{partial mathbf{v}}{partial t} + (mathbf{u}cdot
abla)mathbf{v}
where
abla is the gradient operator del and rac{partial}{partial t} denotes the partial derivative with respect to t. The name is derived from the convection that is represented by the last term.
The convective derivative expresses the Eulerian derivative (written partial/partial t) in Lagrangian coordinates.
Consider water undergoing steady flow through a hosepipe that has a gradually decreasing cross section. Because water is incompressible in practice, conservation of mass requires that the flow is faster at the end of the pipe than at the start. Because the flow is steady, the Eulerian derivative of velocity is everywhere zero, but the convective derivative is nonzero because any individual parcel of fluid accelerates as it moves down the hose.
For tensor fields we usually want to take into account not only translation of the coordinate system due to the fluid movement but also its rotation and stretching. This is achieved by the upper convected time derivative.
There are many other names for this operator, including the Lagrangian derivative, total time derivative, Stokes derivative, particle derivative, and material derivative.

Contents
Proof
See also
References

Proof


Proof is via the multivariate chain rule. In tensor notation (with the Einstein summation convention), the derivation may be written:
:left[ rac{Dmathbf{B}}{Dt}
ight]_j = rac{D}{D t}(hat{B_j}(t, x_i(t))) = rac{partial B_j}{partial t} + rac{partial B_j}{partial x_i} rac{partial x_i}{partial t} = rac{partial B_j}{partial t} + rac{partial x_i}{partial t} rac{partial}{partial x_i} B_j = rac{partial B_j}{partial t} + left[(mathbf{u}cdot
abla)mathbf{B}
ight]_j

See also



Navier-Stokes equations

Euler equations

References



★ Structure and Interpretation of Classical Mechanics. http://mitpress.mit.edu/SICM/book-Z-H-13.html#%_sec_Temp_122

★ Fluid Mechanics by Kundu and Cohen, 3rd Edition

★ Introduction to Continuum Mechanics by Lai, Rubin, and Krempl, 3rd edition

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