5.3 Euler’s equation
With the acceleration of a fluid parcel written correctly as a material derivative, Newton’s second law can be applied to the parcel directly. For a fluid with no viscosity — an inviscid fluid — the only surface force on a parcel comes from pressure, and the resulting equation of motion is Euler’s.
The pressure force on a fluid element
Consider a small rectangular element of volume . Pressure pushes inward on every face. On the two faces perpendicular to , the left face at is pushed in the direction with force , and the right face at is pushed in the direction with force . The net -force is
Pressure pushes a slab from both sides. When the pressures are equal the slab is in static equilibrium; when they differ, the imbalance is a force per unit area = (p_L − p_R). For a slab of thickness dx that's −(∂p/∂x)·dx — equivalently, −∇p per unit volume. Newton's second law on this volume element is exactly Euler's equation: ρ·Du/Dt = −∇p.
The element is pushed not by pressure itself but by the difference in pressure across it. A uniform pressure squeezes from all sides and produces no net force; only a pressure gradient accelerates the fluid. Repeating the argument on all three axes, the net pressure force per unit volume is .
Newton’s second law for the parcel
Force per unit volume equals mass per unit volume times acceleration, . Adding gravity (or any body force) to the pressure force gives Euler’s equation:
▶ Written out with the convective term Derivation
Expanding the material derivative from the previous lesson,
The left side is mass density times the parcel acceleration; the convective term is the nonlinearity inherited from the kinematics of the previous lesson. The right side is the sum of surface force (pressure) and body force (gravity) per unit volume.
A fluid parcel accelerates exactly as a particle does — down the pressure gradient, and under gravity — but it is continuously deformed by its neighbours as it goes, which is what the field description captures and a single particle trajectory cannot.
A closed system
Euler’s equation has three scalar components but four unknown fields: the three components of and the pressure (the density is the fifth in a compressible flow). Continuity from the previous lesson supplies one more equation. For an incompressible flow the count closes: continuity becomes , and pressure adjusts instantaneously to enforce it. For a compressible flow one more relation — an equation of state linking and — is needed to close the system. Euler’s equation governs inviscid flow exactly; the next refinement, viscosity, is what makes the equations describe real fluids near walls.