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Cover image for High-resolution methods for incompressible and low-speed flows
Title:
High-resolution methods for incompressible and low-speed flows
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Series:
Computational fluid and solid mechanics
Publication Information:
Berlin : Springer, 2005
ISBN:
9783540221364
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30000010113111 QA901 D74 2005 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

The study of incompressible ?ows is vital to many areas of science and te- nology. This includes most of the ?uid dynamics that one ?nds in everyday life from the ?ow of air in a room to most weather phenomena. Inundertakingthesimulationofincompressible?uid?ows,oneoftentakes many issues for granted. As these ?ows become more realistic, the problems encountered become more vexing from a computational point-of-view. These range from the benign to the profound. At once, one must contend with the basic character of incompressible ?ows where sound waves have been analytically removed from the ?ow. As a consequence vortical ?ows have been analytically "preconditioned," but the ?ow has a certain non-physical character (sound waves of in?nite velocity). At low speeds the ?ow will be deterministic and ordered, i.e., laminar. Laminar ?ows are governed by a balance between the inertial and viscous forces in the ?ow that provides the stability. Flows are often characterized by a dimensionless number known as the Reynolds number, which is the ratio of inertial to viscous forces in a ?ow. Laminar ?ows correspond to smaller Reynolds numbers. Even though laminar ?ows are organized in an orderly manner, the ?ows may exhibit instabilities and bifurcation phenomena which may eventually lead to transition and turbulence. Numerical modelling of suchphenomenarequireshighaccuracyandmostimportantlytogaingreater insight into the relationship of the numerical methods with the ?ow physics.


Table of Contents

Introduction
The Fluid Flow Equations
The Viscous Fluid Flow Equations
Curvilinear Coordinates and Transformed Equations
Overview of Various Formulations and Model Equations
Basic Principles in Numerical Analysis
Time Integration Methods
Numerical Linear Algebra
Compressible and Preconditioned-Compressible Solvers
The Artificial Compressibility Method
Projection Methods: The Basic Theory and the Exact Projection Method
Approximate Projection Methods
Introduction to Modern High-Resolution Methods
High-Resolution Godunov-Type Methods for Projection Methods
Centered High-Resolution Methods
Riemann Solvers and TVD Methods in Strict Conservation
Beyond Second-Order Methods
Variable Density Flows and Volume Tracking Methods
High-Resolution Methods and Turbulent Flow Computation
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