I just looked through a half dozen references and not a single one even implies that the ideal gas law applies to the transition from one state to the next. There is no "time" term, i.e., none of them say that:
[PV/(nT)]dt=R.
The flow equations that I work with every day (for turbulent flow) all started with Bernoulli's equation (and then added empirical terms to include the "friction" that Bernoulli assumed was absent), not the ideal gas law. I have three different derivations of Bernoulli's equation and none of them includes the ideal gas law.
My undergraduate Chemistry text starts the description of the ideal gas law with "for a closed system at rest ..." and goes on to discuss changing the system volume followed by closing the system again to apply the equation to the second state.
I understand applying the ideal gas law to re-state a flow at a different pressure base. This involves pretending that a daily (or hourly) flow rate is at rest and applying the arithmetic. For virtually all commercial compressible-flows you are well below 0.6 M and the calculation is valid. Sometimes it is above 0.6 M and none of the commercial arithmetic is valid, but as long as everyone believes it there isn't a problem.
Your statement that
If this is so, why has almost every engineer, scientist, and researcher at every university, government agency, and business in the entire world used the ideal gas law in deriving compressible flow equations since time began
is just wrong. I don't know how else to say it. I've spent a lot of time in my career trying to understand where the various compressible-flow equations came from and what assumptions went into them. Most state a range of Reynolds Numbers that are very consistent with minimizing the impact of "flow influenced density" (i.e., they state a valid range that includes a velocity well below 0.6 M).
Flow influenced density is not a new or foreign concept in the world of Engineering, Research, or Science. As CBS commercials said a couple of summers ago "If you've never seen it it is new to you", but that doesn't mean that it is new.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
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