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LETTER TO THE EDITOR
1987 J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 20 1080-1081 doi: 10.1088/0022-3727/20/8/018
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Abstract. The tensile strength of water measured dynamically is less than that measured statically. It is claimed that this anomaly, which has been known for a long time, can be accounted for if one assumes that the transition layer at the free surface of a liquid contains a region for which the effective velocity of sound is very small. This region should be a source of cavitation nuclei, thus lowering the tensile strength. The hydrodynamics of reflection of pressure pulses by such a region are investigated and the imperfect reflection of pressure pulses by the free surface observed by Sedgewick and Trevena (1976) can be explained on the same hypothesis.
Print publication: Issue 8 (14 August 1987)| Post to CiteUlike | | Post to Connotea | | Post to Bibsonomy |
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