Recent Advances In Numerical Methods In Fluids


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Recent Advances in Numerical Methods in Fluids


Recent Advances in Numerical Methods in Fluids

Author: Cedric Taylor

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 1980


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Recent Advances In Numerical Methods And Applications Ii - Proceedings Of The Fourth International Conference


Recent Advances In Numerical Methods And Applications Ii - Proceedings Of The Fourth International Conference

Author: Panayot S Vassilevski

language: en

Publisher: World Scientific

Release Date: 1999-07-05


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This volume contains the proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Numerical Methods and Applications. The major topics covered include: general finite difference, finite volume, finite element and boundary element methods, general numerical linear algebra and parallel computations, numerical methods for nonlinear problems and multiscale methods, multigrid and domain decomposition methods, CFD computations, mathematical modeling in structural mechanics, and environmental and engineering applications. The volume reflects the current research trends in the specified areas of numerical methods and their applications.

Recent Advances in Computational Fluid Dynamics


Recent Advances in Computational Fluid Dynamics

Author: C.C. Chao

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2013-03-07


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From the preface: Fluid dynamics is an excellent example of how recent advances in computational tools and techniques permit the rapid advance of basic and applied science. The development of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has opened new areas of research and has significantly supplemented information available from experimental measurements. Scientific computing is directly responsible for such recent developments as the secondary instability theory of transition to turbulence, dynamical systems analyses of routes to chaos, ideas on the geometry of turbulence, direct simulations of turbulence, three-dimensional full-aircraft flow analyses, and so on. We believe that CFD has already achieved a status in the tool-kit of fluid mechanicians equal to that of the classical scientific techniques of mathematical analysis and laboratory experiment.