Department of Mathematics,
University of California San Diego
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Math 278 - Computational and Applied Mathematics Seminar
Barbara Neuhierl
Siemens Corporate Research and Technologies, Munich
The Lattice-Boltzmann-Method for Computational Aeroacoustics
Abstract:
The so-called Lattice-Boltzmann-Method is a relatively young numerical method for the computation of fluid mechanics. In contrary to 'classical' techniques of computational fluid dynamics where the Navier-Stokes-Equations - a system of partial differential equations describing the macroscopic behavior of a flow - are discretized and solved, the Lattice-Boltzmann-Method starts from the microscopic description of a flow, the Boltzmann-equation. It is a time-explicit procedure based on a strongly simplified kinetic theory, yet it is approximating the Navier-Stokes equations. The presentation gives a short overview about some basic principles of the Lattice-Boltzmann-Method. Typical engineering applications, in particular the feasibility of describing aeroacoustic phenomena (i.e. sound generated by flows which typically requires a time-dependent calculation of pressure and density within a fluid), are pointed out, and a partitioned approach for the coupled simulation of flows and structures is presented.
Host: Randy Bank
November 29, 2007
10:30 AM
AP&M 2402
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