91TV

Fluid mechanics

Fluid mechanics is an important field of enquiry relevant to research in both the biological and physical sciences. 91TV journals Proceedings A, Philosophical Transactions A, Interface and Royal Society Open Science publish research articles, reviews and theme issues in all areas of fluid mechanics.

Latest research

Looking for exciting work in fluid mechanics? Discover top research published by us in recent years.

  Royal Society Open Science Vol 5 Issue 5

Philosophical Transactions A theme issues

Proceedings A Special Feature

 

articles published across the Royal Society journals.

Seminars

Our fluid mechanics features research published in the Royal Society journals. Each talk is associated with a recent paper or theme issue. to the series.

Sir George Gabriel Stokes, President of the Royal Society from 1885 to 1890, remains an important figure for physics and applied mathematics; influencing research into fluids, asymptotics, optics, and acoustics. The Philosophical Transactions A issue outlines modern research fields that have sprung from his work. His 200th birthday also saw the publication of a review article in Proceedings A presenting the state-of-the-science of .

91TV has been publishing scientific articles for 360 years. Browse the for a fascinating insight into the development of science and discover some of the key moments in scientific history.

Meet us at the European Fluid Dynamics Conference in Dublin, Ireland, 26 – 29 August 2025.

Proceedings A

, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering & Earth Sciences, University of Notre Dame
Interests: fluid dynamics, environmental flows, oceanography, atmospheric dynamics, hydraulics, urban flows, flow through vegetation, environmental acoustics

, Oceans Graduate School, The University of Western Australia
Interests: oceanography, environmental fluid mechanics, geophysical fluid mechanics

, School of Engineering, Dartmouth College
Interests: cryospheric sciences; snow and ice mechanics; glaciology; fluid dynamics; icy satellites

, Department of Aeronautics, Imperial College London
Interests: Computational fluid dynamics, hydrodynamic instability, aerodynamics, high-performance computing

, Department of Civil and Infrastructure Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Jodhpur
Interests: Fluid mechanics; Hydraulics; Hydrodynamics; Hydrodynamic model; Turbulent flow; Jet flow; Open channel flow; Hydraulically rough flow; River mechanics; River meandering; Sediment transport

, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Imperial College London
Interests: environmental fluid mechanics, geophysical fluid dynamics, buoyancy-driven flows, stratified turbulence and mixing, convection, flow energetics, ocean physics

, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, North Carolina State University
Interests: fluid mechanics, heat transfer, turbulence, convection in porous media

, Department of Mathematical Sciences, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Interests: Fluid dynamics, mathematical modelling, asymptotic methods, non-Newtonian flows, liquid crystals, thin films, industrial mathematics, biological fluid dynamics, free boundary problems, thermal transport, optimization

, School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Manchester
Interests: free surface flows, Drops and bubbles, Wetting, Microfluidics, Instabilities, Nonlinear Dynamics, Yield and Non-Newtonian flows

, PMMH-CNRS, Sorbonne Université
Interests: computational fluid dynamics, hydrodynamic stability; bifurcation theory, pattern formation; transition to turbulence, spherical, plane, and Taylor-Couette flow, Poiseuille flow; Rayleigh-Benard, Marangoni, and binary fluid convection; Faraday and Eckhaus instabilities

Royal Society Open Science

, University of Warwick
Keywords: Mathematical modelling, control and inference for problems in life and social sciences, as well as fluid dynamics

, University of Glasgow
Keywords: Mathematical biology and physiology, fluid-structure interaction, soft tissue mechanics, interfacial fluid mechanics, gas-liquid foams

, Kyoto University
Keywords: Fluid mechanics, biofluid mechanics, complex fluids, low-Reynolds-number flow, biomechanics, biophysics, soft and active matter, swimming, propulsion, stability

, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Keywords: Wind tunnel modelling, computational fluid dynamics, building aerodynamics, structural dynamics, fluid-structure interaction, wind flow field phenomenological analysis

, Grenoble INP - UGA
Keywords: Surface phenomena, liquid metals, electrohydrodynamics, magnetohydrodynamics, microfluidics, electrowetting

publishes research of scientific excellence representing significant advances across the physical sciences including the field of fluid dynamics. Article types include research articles, reviews, invited perspectives, comments and invited replies and evidence synthesis. First published in 1832, the journal archive includes landmark scientific discoveries by Paul Dirac, Erwin Schrödinger and James Clerk Maxwell, making it one of the most important science journals in history.

publishes high quality theme issues on topics of current importance and general interest within the physical sciences, guest-edited by leading authorities and comprising new research, reviews and opinions from prominent researchers. Each issue aims to create an original and authoritative synthesis, often bridging traditional disciplines, which showcases current developments and provides a foundation for future research, applications and policy decisions. 

publishes cross-disciplinary research transcending the life sciences and physical sciences divide providing a dedicated forum for publication and interaction across scientific boundaries. Articles apply chemistry, engineering, materials science, mathematics and physics to the biological and medical sciences and highlight discoveries in the life sciences of relevance to the physical sciences.

 is an open access journal publishing high-quality original research on the basis of objective peer-review. The journal covers the entire range of science and mathematics and allows the Society to publish all the high-quality work it receives without the usual restrictions on scope, length or impact. It welcomes the submission of all high-quality science including articles which may usually be difficult to publish elsewhere, for example, replications or those that include negative findings.