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  2. Rankine half body - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rankine_half_body

    Schematic diagram to describe Rankine half body flow. In the field of fluid dynamics, a Rankine half body is a feature of fluid flow discovered by Scottish physicist and engineer William Rankine that is formed when a fluid source is added to a fluid undergoing potential flow. Superposition of uniform flow and source flow yields the Rankine half ...

  3. Rankine vortex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rankine_vortex

    The Rankine vortex is a simple mathematical model of a vortex in a viscous fluid. It is named after its discoverer, William John Macquorn Rankine . The vortices observed in nature are usually modelled with an irrotational (potential or free) vortex.

  4. Rankine cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rankine_cycle

    The regenerative Rankine cycle is so named because after emerging from the condenser (possibly as a subcooled liquid) the working fluid is heated by steam tapped from the hot portion of the cycle. On the diagram shown, the fluid at 2 is mixed with the fluid at 4 (both at the same pressure) to end up with the saturated liquid at 7.

  5. Rankine body - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rankine_body

    The Rankine body, discovered by Scottish physicist and engineer William Rankine, is a feature of naval architecture involving the flow of liquid around a body/surface.. In fluid mechanics, a fluid flow pattern formed by combining a uniform stream with a source and a sink of equal strengths, with the line joining the source and sink along the stream direction, conforms to the shape of a Rankine ...

  6. File:Ts-rankine.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ts-rankine.svg

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  7. File:Rankine half body flow diagram.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Rankine_half_body...

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  8. Rankine theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rankine_theory

    Rankine's theory (maximum-normal stress theory), developed in 1857 by William John Macquorn Rankine, [1] is a stress field solution that predicts active and passive earth pressure. It assumes that the soil is cohesionless, the wall is frictionless, the soil-wall interface is vertical, the failure surface on which the soil moves is planar , and ...

  9. Weighted catenary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weighted_catenary

    The Gateway Arch is a weighted catenary: thick at the bottom, thin at the top.. A weighted catenary (also flattened catenary, was defined by William Rankine as transformed catenary [1] and thus sometimes called Rankine curve [2]) is a catenary curve, but of a special form: if a catenary is the curve formed by a chain under its own weight, a weighted catenary is the curve formed if the chain's ...