4.I.7C
Part IB, 2003
Inviscid fluid issues vertically downwards at speed from a circular tube of radius a. The fluid falls onto a horizontal plate a distance below the end of the tube, where it spreads out axisymmetrically.
Show that while the fluid is falling freely it has speed
and occupies a circular jet of radius
where is the height above the plate and is the acceleration due to gravity.
Show further that along the plate, at radial distances (i.e. far from the falling jet), where the fluid is flowing almost horizontally, it does so as a film of height , where