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Wednesday, January 14, 200410:00 AM - 11:00 AMCNLS Conference Room (TA-3, Bldg 1690) Seminar Vorticity and Scalar Confinement A Rotationally Invariant Limiter Approach to Modeling Small Scales John SteinhoffUniversity of Tennessee Space Institute A new version of a computational method, Vorticity Confinement, is
described. Vorticity Confinement has been shown to efficiently treat
thin features in multi-dimensional incompressible fluid flow, such as
vortices and streams of passive scalars, and to convect them over long
distances with no spreading due to numerical errors. It has also been
shown to be effective in representing thin boundary layers on surfaces
immersed in uniform Cartesian grids. We define these thin vortical =
or scalar regions as features. Outside these features, where the
flow is irrotational or the scalar vanishes, the method automatically
reduces to conventional discretized finite difference fluid dynamic
equations. The features are treated as a type of weak solution and,
within the features, a nonlinear difference equation, as opposed to
finite difference equation, is solved that does not necessarily
represent a Taylor expansion discretization of a simple partial
differential equation (PDE). The approach is similar to artificial
compression and shock capturing schemes, where conservation laws are
satisfied across discontinuities. For convecting features, the result
of this conservation is that integral quantities such as total momentum
and amplitude, and centroid motion are accurately computed.
Effectively, the features are treated as multi-dimensional nonlinear
discrete solitary waves that live on the computational lattice. These
obey a confinement relation that is a generalization to multiple
dimensions of 1-D discontinuity capturing schemes. A major point is
that the method involves a rotationally invariant limiter a single
limiter that is a function of rotationally invariant variables. This is
in contrast to conventional discontinuity capturing schemes which may
involve a concatenation of separate 1-D limiters, each a function of
variables along each axis.
Results will be shown for convection of thin streams of passive
scalars, thin convecting vortex filaments, treatment of small vortical
scales in turbulent wakes, and flow over complex surfaces immersed
in uniform grids.
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