Abstract

There are many experimental facts that currently cannot be described theoretically. A possible reason is bad mathematical models and algorithms for calculation, despite the many works in this area of research. The aim of this work is to clarificate the mathematical models of describing for rarefied gas and continuous mechanics and to study the errors that arise when we describe a rarefied gas through distribution function. Writing physical values conservation laws via delta functions, the same classical definition of physical values are obtained as in classical mechanics. Usually the derivation of conservation laws is based using the Ostrogradsky-Gauss theorem for a fixed volume without moving. The theorem is a consequence of the application of the integration in parts at the spatial case. In reality, in mechanics and physics gas and liquid move and not only along a forward path, but also rotate. Discarding the out of integral term means ignoring the velocity circulation over the surface of the selected volume. When taking into account the motion of a gas, this term is difficult to introduce into the differential equation. Therefore, to account for all components of the motion, it is proposed to use an integral formulation. Next question is the role of the discreteness of the description of the medium in the kinetic theory and the interaction of the discreteness and "continuity" of the media. The question of the relationship between the discreteness of a medium and its description with the help of continuum mechanics arises due to the fact that the distances between molecules in a rarefied gas are finite, the times between collisions are finite, but on definition under calculating derivatives on time and space we deal with infinitely small values. We investigate it

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