Thank you very much for your answers and I hope you will allow me to present another example related to trajectory translation.
In this example, reaction is represented by the force exerted by the pipe walls on the forward path of the fluid, and from there result a change of trajectory equivalent with the distance "d" between the point of entry of the fluid "1" and the output point of the fluid "2". From this change of trajectory of the fluid results a linear force (reaction force) which occurs simultaneously and opposite in direction, according to Newton's third law of motion, in the following conditions:
1. If the fluid goes out at the same velocity as it comes in, there should be no net force on the pipe.
2. Preserving the velocity vector, doesn't change the momentum of the fluid.
I did a practical experiment (rudimentary), I pushed water through a elastic spiral pipe with a diaphragm pump:
And the result:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0kb8dYL0lQ
The fluid comes back where it came from, but there is momentum exchange. I think, with a system which generates custom compressibility and pressure wave propagation, there we can have short term instantaneous net forces on the pipe, but I don't have enough knowledge to make it possible.