Step 1: Write the potentials of the elementary flows.
- Uniform flow of speed $U_\infty$ along the $+x$–direction has velocity potential \[ \phi_{\text{uni}}=U_\infty x=U_\infty r\cos\theta. \] - A point vortex of circulation $\Gamma$ at the origin has potential \[ \phi_{\text{vortex}}=\frac{\Gamma}{2\pi}\,\theta, \] since $u_\theta=\dfrac{1}{r}\dfrac{\partial \phi}{\partial \theta}=\dfrac{\Gamma}{2\pi r}$.
Step 2: Account for clockwise sense.
By convention, {counterclockwise} circulation is positive. A {clockwise} vortex therefore has $\Gamma<0$. If its (signed) strength is denoted by $K$, then the vortex potential is $\phi_{\text{vortex}}=\dfrac{K\theta}{2\pi}$.
Step 3: Superpose the potentials.
The flow is the linear superposition of the two potential flows, so \[ \phi=\phi_{\text{vortex}}+\phi_{\text{uni}} =\frac{K\theta}{2\pi}+U_\infty r\cos\theta. \] Among the choices, the only expression with the correct $\theta$–term and the correct angular dependence ($\cos\theta$ for a uniform flow along $x$) is option (A), noting that the sign of $K$ encodes the clockwise sense. Final Answer: \[ \boxed{\text{(A)}} \]
An oil of density $870 \,\text{kg/m}^3$ and viscosity $0.036 \,\text{Pas}$ flows through a straight pipe of 10 cm diameter and 1.5 km length at the flow rate of 250 liters per minute under steady and incompressible flow conditions. To control the flow rate of oil, a valve is fixed at the middle of the pipe causing no change in the total length of the pipe. The total head loss measured across the two ends of the pipe is 11.60 m. Using gravitational acceleration as $10 \,\text{m/s}^2$, the minor head loss contributed by the presence of the valve in m (rounded off to 2 decimal places) is ...............