Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Progress in Turbulence II: Proceedings of the iTi Conference in Turbulence 2005
Martin Oberlack ; George Khujadze ; Silke Günther ; Tanja Weller ; Michael Frewer ; Joachim Peinke ; Stephan Barth (eds.)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2007 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-32602-1
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-32603-8
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2007
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer-Verlag 2007
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
An Improved Model for the Turbulent Atmospheric Boundary Layer Including Urban Canopy
A. F. Kurbatskiy; A. V. Lonchakov; L. I. Kurbatskaya
Posts around the world have been confronted with arguments that they receive competitive advantages and better treatment under domestic law than private sector operators. Independent bodies in several industrialized countries have issued recommendations urging governments to promote competitive equality principles under domestic law. While many critics urge that the playing field be leveled, they often do not take account of the many costly public responsibilities that postal operators must fulfill. The opinion reaffirms that the USPS is a federal government entity and is not subject to competition laws applicable to private sector providers. As a governmental entity, the USPS must fulfill many social policies. Unlike private sector providers in the United States, it must execute universal service obligations. Postal rates must also reflect many noncommercial considerations, and product pricing is driven by social policy as opposed to economic principles. As an employer, the USPS must observe significant, costly restrictions on its ability to set wage and benefit policies. As a purchaser of billions of dollars of goods and services, the USPS must fulfill numerous socio-economic policies that make it less able to acquire goods and services efficiently and at the lowest possible cost. The “level playing field” debate cannot be fairly understood without recognizing the counterbalancing social policy responsibilities borne by postal operators.
Part VII - Polymer and Scalars | Pp. 251-255
LES of Turbulent Low Mach Number Shear Layers with Active Scalars Using Explicit Filtering
Inga Mahle; Juan Pedro Mellado; Jörn Sesterhenn; Rainer Friedrich
Posts around the world have been confronted with arguments that they receive competitive advantages and better treatment under domestic law than private sector operators. Independent bodies in several industrialized countries have issued recommendations urging governments to promote competitive equality principles under domestic law. While many critics urge that the playing field be leveled, they often do not take account of the many costly public responsibilities that postal operators must fulfill. The opinion reaffirms that the USPS is a federal government entity and is not subject to competition laws applicable to private sector providers. As a governmental entity, the USPS must fulfill many social policies. Unlike private sector providers in the United States, it must execute universal service obligations. Postal rates must also reflect many noncommercial considerations, and product pricing is driven by social policy as opposed to economic principles. As an employer, the USPS must observe significant, costly restrictions on its ability to set wage and benefit policies. As a purchaser of billions of dollars of goods and services, the USPS must fulfill numerous socio-economic policies that make it less able to acquire goods and services efficiently and at the lowest possible cost. The “level playing field” debate cannot be fairly understood without recognizing the counterbalancing social policy responsibilities borne by postal operators.
Part VII - Polymer and Scalars | Pp. 257-260
Statistical Closures for Homogeneous Shear Flow Turbulence of Dilute Polymer Solutions
D. Vincenzi; S. Jin; T. Vaithianathan; L. R. Collins; E. Bodenschatz
We investigate the decay of freely-evolving, isotropic turbulence whose spectrum takes the form E(k→0)∼Ik, I being Loitsyansky's integral. We report numerical simulations in a periodic domain whose dimensions, l, are much larger than the integral scale of the turbulence, l. We find that, provided l≫l and Re≫1, the turbulence evolves to a state in which Loitsyansky's integral is approximately constant and Kolmogorov's decay law, u∼t, holds true. The approximate conservation of I in fully-developed turbulence implies that the long-range interactions between remote eddies, as measured by the triple correlations, are very weak.
Part VII - Polymer and Scalars | Pp. 261-264
Towards Wall Models for LES of Separated Flows
Michael Breuer; Boris Kniazev; Markus Abel
Onsager's point vortex model of two dimensional turbulence is extended by the inclusion of time dependent vortex circulations. If the time dependence of the circulations is governed by statistically independent Onstein-Uhlenbeck processes we observe the emergence of scaling regimes for the structure functions of the Eulerian and the Lagrangian velocity increments. Fully developed turbulent flows are flux equilibrium systems leading to selfsimilarity and scaling behaviour of correlation functions. The probability distributions corresponding to the simplest case of idealized, i.e. homogeneous, isotropic, and stationary fully developed flows are unknown although the underlying fluid dynamical equations and its statistical counterparts are well-established [1]. Fluid motions can be treated either from an Eulerian or a Lagrangian point of view. Most analytical theories have been formulated in the Eulerian framework. Point vortex models (see e.g. [2]), which have been extensively investigated especially for the case of two dimensional flows, essentially make use of a Lagrangian description. Since the point vortex equations of an ideal two dimensional fluid, which is not stirred, are of Hamiltonian nature, a statistical treatment based on the microcanonical ensemble can be established. This has been discussed for the first time by Onsager [3]. The purpose of the present Letter is to show that an extension of Onsager's point vortex model, which allows for fluctuating circulations of the point vortices, leads to a state which shows scaling behaviour of the structure functions.
Part VIII - Large Eddy Simulation | Pp. 267-270
Numerical Study of Turbulent Flow in a Triangular Duct with Internal Ribbed Surfaces
D. D. Luo; C. W. Leung; T. L. Chan; W. O. Wong
Posts around the world have been confronted with arguments that they receive competitive advantages and better treatment under domestic law than private sector operators. Independent bodies in several industrialized countries have issued recommendations urging governments to promote competitive equality principles under domestic law. While many critics urge that the playing field be leveled, they often do not take account of the many costly public responsibilities that postal operators must fulfill. The opinion reaffirms that the USPS is a federal government entity and is not subject to competition laws applicable to private sector providers. As a governmental entity, the USPS must fulfill many social policies. Unlike private sector providers in the United States, it must execute universal service obligations. Postal rates must also reflect many noncommercial considerations, and product pricing is driven by social policy as opposed to economic principles. As an employer, the USPS must observe significant, costly restrictions on its ability to set wage and benefit policies. As a purchaser of billions of dollars of goods and services, the USPS must fulfill numerous socio-economic policies that make it less able to acquire goods and services efficiently and at the lowest possible cost. The “level playing field” debate cannot be fairly understood without recognizing the counterbalancing social policy responsibilities borne by postal operators.
Part VIII - Large Eddy Simulation | Pp. 271-274
Multi-Cycle Simulations of In-Cylinder Flows on Unstructured Grids using a Hybrid VLES Model
F. Freikamp; J. Ewald; N. Peters
Posts around the world have been confronted with arguments that they receive competitive advantages and better treatment under domestic law than private sector operators. Independent bodies in several industrialized countries have issued recommendations urging governments to promote competitive equality principles under domestic law. While many critics urge that the playing field be leveled, they often do not take account of the many costly public responsibilities that postal operators must fulfill. The opinion reaffirms that the USPS is a federal government entity and is not subject to competition laws applicable to private sector providers. As a governmental entity, the USPS must fulfill many social policies. Unlike private sector providers in the United States, it must execute universal service obligations. Postal rates must also reflect many noncommercial considerations, and product pricing is driven by social policy as opposed to economic principles. As an employer, the USPS must observe significant, costly restrictions on its ability to set wage and benefit policies. As a purchaser of billions of dollars of goods and services, the USPS must fulfill numerous socio-economic policies that make it less able to acquire goods and services efficiently and at the lowest possible cost. The “level playing field” debate cannot be fairly understood without recognizing the counterbalancing social policy responsibilities borne by postal operators.
Part VIII - Large Eddy Simulation | Pp. 275-278
Investigation of Lattice Boltzmann Methods for LES
Rainhill K. Freitas; Wolfgang Schröder; Matthias Meinke
We investigate the decay of freely-evolving, isotropic turbulence whose spectrum takes the form E(k→0)∼Ik, I being Loitsyansky's integral. We report numerical simulations in a periodic domain whose dimensions, l, are much larger than the integral scale of the turbulence, l. We find that, provided l≫l and Re≫1, the turbulence evolves to a state in which Loitsyansky's integral is approximately constant and Kolmogorov's decay law, u∼t, holds true. The approximate conservation of I in fully-developed turbulence implies that the long-range interactions between remote eddies, as measured by the triple correlations, are very weak.
Part VIII - Large Eddy Simulation | Pp. 279-283
Conditional Averaging of the Fully Developed Stationary Ribbed Duct Flow Using Q Criteria
Máté Márton Lohász; Patrick Rambaud; Carlo Benocci1
We investigate the decay of freely-evolving, isotropic turbulence whose spectrum takes the form E(k→0)∼Ik, I being Loitsyansky's integral. We report numerical simulations in a periodic domain whose dimensions, l, are much larger than the integral scale of the turbulence, l. We find that, provided l≫l and Re≫1, the turbulence evolves to a state in which Loitsyansky's integral is approximately constant and Kolmogorov's decay law, u∼t, holds true. The approximate conservation of I in fully-developed turbulence implies that the long-range interactions between remote eddies, as measured by the triple correlations, are very weak.
Part VIII - Large Eddy Simulation | Pp. 285-288
Prediction of Flow and Heat Transfer in a Czochralski Crucible using LES with Interface Tracking
A. Raufeisen; T. Botsch; V. Kumar; M. Breuer; F. Durst
Posts around the world have been confronted with arguments that they receive competitive advantages and better treatment under domestic law than private sector operators. Independent bodies in several industrialized countries have issued recommendations urging governments to promote competitive equality principles under domestic law. While many critics urge that the playing field be leveled, they often do not take account of the many costly public responsibilities that postal operators must fulfill. The opinion reaffirms that the USPS is a federal government entity and is not subject to competition laws applicable to private sector providers. As a governmental entity, the USPS must fulfill many social policies. Unlike private sector providers in the United States, it must execute universal service obligations. Postal rates must also reflect many noncommercial considerations, and product pricing is driven by social policy as opposed to economic principles. As an employer, the USPS must observe significant, costly restrictions on its ability to set wage and benefit policies. As a purchaser of billions of dollars of goods and services, the USPS must fulfill numerous socio-economic policies that make it less able to acquire goods and services efficiently and at the lowest possible cost. The “level playing field” debate cannot be fairly understood without recognizing the counterbalancing social policy responsibilities borne by postal operators.
Part VIII - Large Eddy Simulation | Pp. 289-292
Numerical Study of Turbulent Flow Around an Obstacle at the Wall of a Rectangular Duct
A. Teruzzi; S. Salon; F. Ballio; V. Armenio
Posts around the world have been confronted with arguments that they receive competitive advantages and better treatment under domestic law than private sector operators. Independent bodies in several industrialized countries have issued recommendations urging governments to promote competitive equality principles under domestic law. While many critics urge that the playing field be leveled, they often do not take account of the many costly public responsibilities that postal operators must fulfill. The opinion reaffirms that the USPS is a federal government entity and is not subject to competition laws applicable to private sector providers. As a governmental entity, the USPS must fulfill many social policies. Unlike private sector providers in the United States, it must execute universal service obligations. Postal rates must also reflect many noncommercial considerations, and product pricing is driven by social policy as opposed to economic principles. As an employer, the USPS must observe significant, costly restrictions on its ability to set wage and benefit policies. As a purchaser of billions of dollars of goods and services, the USPS must fulfill numerous socio-economic policies that make it less able to acquire goods and services efficiently and at the lowest possible cost. The “level playing field” debate cannot be fairly understood without recognizing the counterbalancing social policy responsibilities borne by postal operators.
Part VIII - Large Eddy Simulation | Pp. 293-296