5.1 The continuum and the material derivative
A fluid is a continuum that cannot resist a sustained shear elastically: any applied shear, however small, produces a flow that persists as long as the shear does. This single property — fluidity — separates fluids from solids and sets the entire subject apart from the mechanics of rigid bodies. The equations of motion still come from Newton’s second law, but applied to a deformable element of continuum rather than to a particle, and the first task is to write the acceleration of such an element correctly.
Two ways to describe a flow
A scalar field carried by a flowing fluid — a temperature, a concentration, a density — can be described from two vantage points. The Eulerian description sits at a fixed point in space and records the value of as the fluid streams past. The Lagrangian description follows a particular fluid parcel along its trajectory and records the value of that that parcel carries.
The two are not the same, and the distinction is the crux of fluid kinematics. A thermometer bolted to a riverbank is Eulerian; a thermometer drifting downstream on a raft is Lagrangian. Even in a steady flow — one where the Eulerian field never changes, — the drifting parcel can feel change, simply by being carried into a region where has a different value.
The material derivative
Let a parcel move with the local fluid velocity . In a time it moves by , and the change in it experiences is
Dividing by defines the material derivative — the rate of change following the parcel:
Here is the local rate of change, what the fixed Eulerian observer sees; is the convective rate of change, the part the parcel picks up by being transported through a spatial gradient (refresher: vector calculus →). The operator converts any Eulerian field into the rate of change felt by a co-moving parcel.
The field T(x, y, t) is a wave advecting at speed U: T = T₀ + A sin(k(x − Ut)). A fixed-frame observer sees T oscillating in time — that's ∂T/∂t. A parcel drifting *with* the flow sees no change — DT/Dt = 0, because the parcel moves with the wave. The material derivative D/Dt = ∂/∂t + u·∇ is the time derivative *that matters for Newton's second law on a fluid element*.
The field shown is a frozen wave carried by the flow, . The Eulerian observer at fixed sees oscillate in time as crests sweep past — . The Lagrangian parcel drifts with the wave at speed and sees never change — . The local and convective terms are individually nonzero but cancel exactly.
Why this matters for Newton’s law
The acceleration of a fluid parcel is the material derivative of its velocity, , not the local derivative . Writing it out,
the convective term is quadratic in the velocity. This single term is the origin of nearly everything difficult about fluid dynamics: it is nonlinear, and that nonlinearity is what produces turbulence, vortex shedding, and the open mathematical questions that still surround the equations of motion. Every dynamical equation in the chapters that follow — Euler, Bernoulli, Navier–Stokes — carries this at its heart.