Kelvin's minimum energy theorem

In fluid mechanics, Kelvin's minimum energy theorem (named after William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin who published it in 1849[1]) states that the steady irrotational motion of an incompressible fluid occupying a simply connected region has less kinetic energy than any other motion with the same normal component of velocity at the boundary (and, if the domain extends to infinity, with zero value values there).[2][3][4][5]

Using Thomson's theorem (see Thomson problem), an analogous theorem in electrostatics, Levin showed [6] a counterintuitive result: the force of electrostatic induction can be repulsive in certain geometries. Recently, McKee [7] connected Levin's result to the field of ideal fluid mechanics where he demonstrated counterintuitive fluid forces can occur in slit-type geometries; McKee's result directly relies on Kelvin's minimum energy theorem.

Mathematical Proof

Let be the velocity field of an incompressible irrotational fluid and be that of any other incompressible fluid motion with same normal component velocity at the boundary of the domain, where is the unit vector of the bounding surface (and, if the domain extends to infinity, there). Then the difference between the kinetic energy is given by

can be rearranged to give

Since is irrotational and the domain is simply-connected, a single-valued velocity potential exists, i.e., . Using this, the second integral in the above equation can be written as

The second integral is identically zero for steady incompressible fluid, i.e., . Applying the Gauss theorem for the first integral we find

where the surface integral is zero since normal component of velocities are equal there. Thus, one concludes

or in other words, , where the equality holds only if , thereby proving the theorem.

References

  1. Thomson, W. (1849). Notes on hydrodynamics. V. On the vis-viva of a liquid in motion. Camb. Dubl. Math. J, 4, 90-94.
  2. Kelvin, W. T. B., & Tait, P. G. (1867). Treatise on natural philosophy (Vol. 1). Clarendon Press.
  3. Lamb, H. (1932). Hydrodynamics. Cambridge university press.
  4. Batchelor, G. K. (2000). An introduction to fluid dynamics. Cambridge university press.
  5. Truesdell, C. (1954). The kinematics of vorticity (Vol. 954). Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  6. Levin, M. (2011). "Is the electrostatic force between a point charge and a neutral metallic object always attractive?". American Journal of Physics. 79 (8): 843--849. doi:10.1119/1.3595554. hdl:1721.1/71213.
  7. McKee, K. (2023). "Boundary effects on ideal fluid forces and Kelvin's minimum energy theorem". Journal of Fluid Mechanics. 959: A40. arXiv:2207.07070. doi:10.1017/jfm.2023.174.
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