In fluid dynamics and electrostatics, slender-body theory is a methodology that can be used to take advantage of the slenderness of a body to obtain an approximation to a field surrounding it and/or the net effect of the field on the body. Principal applications are to Stokes flow — at very low Reynolds numbers — and in electrostatics.
Consider slender body of length
\ell
2a
\ell\gga
\mu
\ell/a → infty
Slender-body theory allows us to derive an approximate relationship between the velocity of the body at each point along its length and the force per unit length experienced by the body at that point.
Let the axis of the body be described by
\boldsymbol{X}(s,t)
s
t
\boldsymbol{f}(s)
\boldsymbol{f}
a
\boldsymbol{X}(s,t)
\partial\boldsymbol{X}/\partialt
The fluid velocity
\boldsymbol{u}(\boldsymbol{x})
\boldsymbol{x}
\boldsymbol{u}(\boldsymbol{x})=
\ell | |
\int | |
0 |
\boldsymbol{f | |
(s)}{8\pi\mu} |
⋅ \left(
I | |
|\boldsymbol{x |
-\boldsymbol{X}|}+
(\boldsymbol{x | |
- |
\boldsymbol{X})(\boldsymbol{x}-\boldsymbol{X})}{|\boldsymbol{x}-\boldsymbol{X}|3}\right)ds
I
Asymptotic analysis can then be used to show that the leading-order contribution to the integral for a point
\boldsymbol{x}
s0
|s-s0|=O(a)
a\ll\ell
\boldsymbol{f}(s) ≈ \boldsymbol{f}(s0)
\partial\boldsymbol{X | |
\boldsymbol{X}'=\partial\boldsymbol{X}/\partials
The expression may be inverted to give the force density in terms of the motion of the body:
\boldsymbol{f}(s)\sim
4\pi\mu | |
ln(\ell/a) |
\partial\boldsymbol{X | |
Two canonical results that follow immediately are for the drag force
F
\ell
a
u
F\sim
2\pi\mu\ellu | |
ln(\ell/a) |
F\sim
4\pi\mu\ellu | |
ln(\ell/a) |
Note that the dominant length scale in the above expressions is the longer length
\ell
O(1)
\ell/a