Skip to main content
Library homepage
 

Text Color

Text Size

 

Margin Size

 

Font Type

Enable Dyslexic Font
Physics LibreTexts

52.7: The Reynolds Number

( \newcommand{\kernel}{\mathrm{null}\,}\)

Experiments have shown that there is a combination of four factors that determines whether flow of a viscous fluid through a pipe is laminar or turbulent. These four factors can be combined into a single dimensionless number called the Reynolds number Re, whose value gives an indication of whether flow will be laminar or turbulent:

Re=ρvDμ

Here ρ is the fluid density, v is the average velocity, D is the diameter of the pipe, and μ is the dynamic viscosity. Experience shows that, as a general rule of thumb:

  • Re< 2000: laminar flow
  • 2000<Re<3000 : transition region
  • Re> 3000: turbulent flow

In the transition region (Re between 2000 and 3000), the fluid is unstable and may change back and forth between laminar and turbulent flow.


52.7: The Reynolds Number is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

  • Was this article helpful?

Support Center

How can we help?