Amen.Both approaches are right in all situations. Which approach should be employed is merely a matter of which is more convenient to use given the type of data available to characterize a particular flow pattern. The inability of one model or the other to explain lift production is really a problem of using a version of these laws that is oversimplified.
I'm sorry you are to stubborn to read a few pages written. Maybe if you actually had then you would see that you aren't actually contradicting the article but you are simply only looking at it from one side of the fence. I'm sorry you were raised as somebody who knows everything.Greg Locock wrote:I don't need to read the article. Action at a distance for pressures is a nonsense. The gas molecule hits another molecule and via a fairly straightforward piece of maths the state of both molecules is changed.
Please, speak for yourself.Pierce89 wrote:... we can't see the circulation...