The following pages link to Luis Ramírez (Q1645875):
Displaying 18 items.
- New high-resolution-preserving sliding mesh techniques for higher-order finite volume schemes (Q1645877) (← links)
- A new higher-order finite volume method based on moving least squares for the resolution of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations on unstructured grids (Q1667362) (← links)
- Smoothed particle hydrodynamics: a consistent model for interfacial multiphase fluid flow simulations (Q1699496) (← links)
- A higher-order Chimera method for finite volume schemes (Q1787386) (← links)
- A very accurate arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian meshless method for computational aeroacoustics (Q1986374) (← links)
- A high-order finite volume method with improved isotherms reconstruction for the computation of multiphase flows using the Navier-Stokes-Korteweg equations (Q2004547) (← links)
- A well-balanced SPH-ALE scheme for shallow water applications (Q2051112) (← links)
- A proof of the elliptical range theorem via Kippenhahn's theorem (Q2116690) (← links)
- A reduced-dissipation WENO scheme with automatic dissipation adjustment (Q2123936) (← links)
- Very high-order method on immersed curved domains for finite difference schemes with regular Cartesian grids (Q2175311) (← links)
- An a posteriori-implicit turbulent model with automatic dissipation adjustment for large eddy simulation of compressible flows (Q2285538) (← links)
- High-accurate SPH method with multidimensional optimal order detection limiting (Q2310306) (← links)
- An \textit{a posteriori}, efficient, high-spectral resolution hybrid finite-difference method for compressible flows (Q2310937) (← links)
- A high-order density-based finite volume method for the computation of all-speed flows (Q2631576) (← links)
- An arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian SPH-MLS method for the computation of compressible viscous flows (Q2672743) (← links)
- A new mean preserving moving least squares method for arbitrary order finite volume schemes (Q2700406) (← links)
- Pore-scale simulation of multiphase flows using equations of state that preserve the correct surface tension (Q6566039) (← links)
- Machine learning-based WENO5 scheme (Q6585341) (← links)