Note on the effect of grad-div stabilization on calculating drag and lift coefficients
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Publication:2168587
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Cites work
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1015078 (Why is no real title available?)
- A Connection Between Scott–Vogelius and Grad-Div Stabilized Taylor–Hood FE Approximations of the Navier–Stokes Equations
- A low-order Galerkin finite element method for the Navier-Stokes equations of steady incompressible flow: a stabilization issue and iterative methods.
- An efficient and modular grad-div stabilization
- Analysis of the grad-div stabilization for the time-dependent Navier-Stokes equations with inf-sup stable finite elements
- Finite element methods for incompressible flow problems
- Fully discrete approximations to the time-dependent Navier-Stokes equations with a projection method in time and grad-div stabilization
- Grad-div stablilization for Stokes equations
- Higher temporal accuracy for LES-C turbulence models
- Introduction to the numerical analysis of incompressible viscous flows.
- New development in freefem++
- Norm estimates for a maximal right inverse of the divergence operator in spaces of piecewise polynomials
- On a reduced sparsity stabilization of Grad-div type for incompressible flow problems
- On solving the Navier-Stokes equations at large Reynolds numbers
- On the enforcement of discrete mass conservation in incompressible flow simulations with continuous velocity approximation
- On the parameter choice in grad-div stabilization for the Stokes equations
- Reference values for drag and lift of a two‐dimensional time‐dependent flow around a cylinder
- Sensitivity analysis of the grad-div stabilization parameter in finite element simulations of incompressible flow
- The Scott-Vogelius finite elements revisited
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