It appears that Rosen et al. (1974) first showed in vitro that endothelial cells alter their production of a specific molecule (histamine) in response to altered shear stresses. They accomplished this using cultured cells placed within a parallel-plate device. Their device was 1.3\times 1.3\times 23.5 cm in dimension, with the cells placed in the fully developed region (15 cm from the entrance). Because the flow chamber was not much wider than it was deep, however, the equations to compute the wall shear stress differed from Eq. (9.30). Ensuring that h\ll w allows Eq. (9.30) to be used and facilitates the easy design and interpretation of the experiment. Toward this end, let us consider the work by Levesque and Nerem (1985). Their flow chamber was 0.025\times1.3\times5 cm in dimension; hence, h\ll w and our equations hold. They plotted the morphological measures for the cells versus wall shear stress \tau_{w}, which they computed as \tau_{w}=\frac{\partial \mu Q}{wh^{2}}. (9.30) \tau_{w}=\frac{\partial \mu ^{2}}{\rho h^{2}}Re, where Re is the Reynolds’ number. Show that this relation is correct.