Abstract

We consider the flow of a dilute gas around a macroscopic heavy object. The state of the gas is described by an extended Boltzmann equation where the interactions between the gas molecules and the object are taken into account in computing the rate of change of the distribution function of the gas. We then show that the extended Boltzmann is equivalent to the usual Boltzmann equation, supplemented by boundary conditions imposed on the distribution function at the surface of the object. The remainder of the paper is devoted to a study of the solution of the extended Boltzmann equation in the case that the mean free path of a gas molecule is small compared to some characteristic dimension of the macroscopic object. We show that the Chapman-Enskog normal solution of the ordinary Boltzmann equation is not in general a solution of the extended equation near the surface of the object and must be supplemented by a boundary layer term. We then introduce a projection operator method which allows us to decompose the solution of the extended equation into a normal solution part and a boundary layer part when the gas flow is sufficiently slow. As a specific example of the method we consider the flow around a sphere, and derive the Stokes-Boussinesq form for the frequency-dependent force on the sphere for arbitrary slip coefficient. This derivation is the first one that starts from the Boltzmann equation for a general dilute gas and incorporates the effect of the boundary layer on the drag force.

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