| J. J. Monaghan. Simulating free surface flows with SPH. Journal of Computational Physics, (110):399--406, 1994. |
....OE. Spectral methods, however, are most suited for uniformly partitioned, periodic domains having structured meshes. Spectral methods can also encounter difficulties in resolving discontinuous data, where Gibbs phenomena can be problematic. Particle methods, e.g. smoothed particle hydrodynamics [120,122,123] and particle in cell [91] techniques, are quite powerful by virtue of their Lagrangian description of the fluid. They typically model the nonlinear advection terms with discrete particle motion, then rely upon finite difference, finite volume, or finite element discretization techniques for the ....
....applications and shock dynamics. Why have particle based methods not been used more often (or at all) for simulating free surface flows Because particle based methods can be prohibitively CPU and memory intensive, they have not had the ability to model incompressible flows until only recently [91, 120, 122, 123], they tend to be susceptible to subtle numerical instabilities [19] and they do not have adequate awareness and notoriety among many researchers interested in free surface flows. If sustained attention is paid to these outstanding issues (e.g. the memory use issue is addressed in [156] then ....
J. J. Monaghan. Simulating free surface flows with SPH. Journal of Computational Physics, 110:399--406, 1994.
No context found.
J. J. Monaghan. Simulating free surface flows with SPH. Journal of Computational Physics, (110):399--406, 1994.
No context found.
J. J. Monaghan. Simulating free surface flows with SPH. Journal of Computational Physics, (110):399--406, 1994.
No context found.
J. J. Monaghan, Simulating free-surface flows with Sph, J. Comput. Phys. 110, 399 (1994).
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