A direction splitting algorithm for incompressible flow in complex geometries
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Navier-Stokes equations for incompressible viscous fluids (76D05) Finite difference methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs (65M06) Finite volume methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs (65M08) Finite volume methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics (76M12)
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Cites work
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- A Variable Mesh Finite Difference Method for Solving a Class of Parabolic Differential Equations in One Space Variable
- A distributed Lagrange multiplier/fictitious domain method for particulate flows
- A new class of fractional step techniques for the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations using direction splitting
- A new class of massively parallel direction splitting for the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations
- A volume penalization method for incompressible flows and scalar advection-diffusion with moving obstacles
- Alternating direction methods for three space variables
- An overview of projection methods for incompressible flows
- An unimprovable estimate of the convergence rate in the fictitious domain method for the Navier-Stokes equations
- Another Alternating-Direction-Implicit Method
- Convergence analysis of a class of massively parallel direction splitting algorithms for the Navier-Stokes equations in simple domains
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- Numerical analysis of blood flow in the heart
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- Relationship between the truncation errors of centered finite-difference approximations on uniform and nonuniform meshes
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Cited in
(9)- A note on local refinement for direction splitting methods
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1842541 (Why is no real title available?)
- A direction splitting approach for incompressible Brinkman flow
- Efficient diffusion domain modeling and fast numerical methods for diblock copolymer melt in complex domains
- A fast algorithm for direct simulation of particulate flows using conforming grids
- An efficient parallel immersed boundary algorithm using a pseudo-compressible fluid solver
- High-order time stepping for the Navier-Stokes equations with minimal computational complexity
- Simulation of environmental flow problems in geometrically complex domains. II: A domain-splitting method
- An Accurate and Scalable Direction-Splitting Solver for Flows Laden with Non-Spherical Rigid Bodies – Part 1: Fixed Rigid Bodies
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