Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Capillary_surface> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 24 of
24
with 100 items per page.
- Capillary_surface abstract "In fluid mechanics and mathematics, a capillary surface is a surface that represents the interface between two different fluids. As a consequence of being a surface, a capillary surface has no thickness in slight contrast with most real fluid interfaces.Capillary surfaces are of interest in mathematics because the problems involved are very nonlinear and have interesting properties, such as discontinuous dependence on boundary data at isolated points. In particular, static capillary surfaces with gravity absent have constant mean curvature, so that a minimal surface is a special case of static capillary surface.They are also of practical interest for fluid management in space (or other environments free of body forces), where both flow and static configuration are often dominated by capillary effects.".
- Capillary_surface wikiPageID "14060661".
- Capillary_surface wikiPageRevisionID "545019134".
- Capillary_surface hasPhotoCollection Capillary_surface.
- Capillary_surface subject Category:Fluid_dynamics.
- Capillary_surface subject Category:Fluid_mechanics.
- Capillary_surface subject Category:Fluid_statics.
- Capillary_surface type Abstraction100002137.
- Capillary_surface type Event100029378.
- Capillary_surface type FluidStatics.
- Capillary_surface type Happening107283608.
- Capillary_surface type Noise107430211.
- Capillary_surface type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Capillary_surface type Static107431683.
- Capillary_surface type Trouble107289014.
- Capillary_surface type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Capillary_surface comment "In fluid mechanics and mathematics, a capillary surface is a surface that represents the interface between two different fluids. As a consequence of being a surface, a capillary surface has no thickness in slight contrast with most real fluid interfaces.Capillary surfaces are of interest in mathematics because the problems involved are very nonlinear and have interesting properties, such as discontinuous dependence on boundary data at isolated points.".
- Capillary_surface label "Capillary surface".
- Capillary_surface sameAs m.03csbx2.
- Capillary_surface sameAs Q5035397.
- Capillary_surface sameAs Q5035397.
- Capillary_surface sameAs Capillary_surface.
- Capillary_surface wasDerivedFrom Capillary_surface?oldid=545019134.
- Capillary_surface isPrimaryTopicOf Capillary_surface.