incompressibilnost
Incompressibilnost (incompressibility) is a concept used in physics and engineering to describe a property of a material or fluid in which density remains effectively constant when subjected to pressure or mechanical load. For liquids, density changes with pressure are typically very small, so they are often treated as incompressible. For solids, the degree of compressibility varies; many metals and ceramics are relatively incompressible, while polymers may be notably more compressible. The relation between pressure change and volume change is ΔP = K ΔV/V, where K is the bulk modulus; large K corresponds to small volume changes.
In fluid dynamics, incompressible flow refers to constant density in time, so ρ is constant and the
In solids and continuum mechanics, the incompressible limit corresponds to a Poisson's ratio approaching 0.5, where
Applications and limitations: The incompressible assumption simplifies analysis in hydraulics, biomechanics and many steady flows. It