478 CHAPTER 11 • APPLICATIONS OF HARMONIC FUNCTIONS
Figure 11.60
y
Image of a fluid flow under w = J (z) = z + !.
z
He showed that the image of a circle passing through z 1 = 1 and containing
the point z 2 = - 1 is mapped onto a. curve shaped like the cross section of an
airplane wing. We call this curve the J oukowski airfoil. If the streamlines for a
flow around the circle are known, then their images under the mapping w = J (z)
will be streamlines for a flow around the Joukowski airfoil, as shown in Figure
11.60.
The mapping w = J (z) is two-to-one, because J (z) = J (~),for z -f 0. The
region Jzl > 1 is mapped one-to-one onto the w plane slit a.Jong the portion of
the real axis -2 ~ u ~ 2. To visualize this mapping, we investigate the implicit
form, which we obtain by using the substitutions
1 z^2 -2z+ l
w-2 = z - 2+-= ----
z z
1 z^2 + 2z + 1
w+2 = z+2+-= ----
z z
(z-1)^2
z
(z + 1)
2
z
and
Forming the quotient of these two quantities results in the relationship
w-2- (z-1)
2
w + 2 z + l
The inverse of T ( w) = w -
2
2
is S 3 ( z) =
2
1
+
2
z. Therefore, if we use the
w + - z
notation S 1 (z) = z -
1
and 82 (z) = z^2 , we can express J (z) as the composition
z + l
of S1, 82, and 83:
w = J (z) = S3 (82 (Si (z))). (11-36)
We can easily show that w = J (z) = z + ~maps the four points z 1 = -i, z2 = 1,
z
zs = i, and z 4 = - 1 onto w 1 = 0, w2 = 2, w3 = 0, and w 4 = -2, respectively.
However, the composition functions in Equation (11-36) must be considered
in order to visualize the geometry involved. First, the bilinear transformation