Small Rants, that look more like something that came out of dreams...
Posted September 2, 2011 at 20:32 by wyldckat
Well... I'm somewhat lazy, so instead of creating a personal blog elsewhere, I'll rant a bit more here at cfd-online.com/Forums, right here in my user blog
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Rant #1 - Technically, it seems that Google's name is explained here:
Mmm... "good people" <-> "google" ... "goodple" -> "google"! This would lead me to believe that their moto of doing no evil, could actually have been subliminally put into (or taken from) their minds when coming up with the name and/or motto.
[1] - here if you must know
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Rant #2 - After (re)viewing a lot of the comments at the thread OpenFOAM acquired by SGi and reading Alberto's call to sanity and hope (I'm not quoting ), my mind did some math around the acronyms FUD (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt) and CFD... and came up with: Constant Fear and Doubt. And oddly enough, it makes some sense!
Those who have dealt with Computational Fluid Dymanics long enough, learn the easy or hard way that results can't be fully trusted unless you:
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Small rants, to be continued... here: Small Rants, part 2
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Rant #1 - Technically, it seems that Google's name is explained here:
- http://graphics.stanford.edu/~dk/google_name_origin.html
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google#History
Quote:
the good people at google
[1] - here if you must know
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Rant #2 - After (re)viewing a lot of the comments at the thread OpenFOAM acquired by SGi and reading Alberto's call to sanity and hope (I'm not quoting ), my mind did some math around the acronyms FUD (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt) and CFD... and came up with: Constant Fear and Doubt. And oddly enough, it makes some sense!
Those who have dealt with Computational Fluid Dymanics long enough, learn the easy or hard way that results can't be fully trusted unless you:
- Understand the physics behind the simulation;
- Validate them (somehow) with real experiments;
- Have a good mesh to begin with;
- Define proper boundary conditions;
- Have the residuals lead to convergence;
- Use the correct models for your case at hand, or at least understand the limitations of the chosen model.
- Not understanding how the numbers of Reynolds, Courant, Fourier, Biot... can relate and/or have significant meaning in your simulation case, could lead to disaster!
- No validation, not even even for a simpler related case, means that your results are as meaningful as the online game "World of Warcraft"... you might be right about your assumptions, you might know how to fight, but without real life experience, it's all virtual.
- One wrong cell, point, face or even cell structure (polyhedra vs tetrahedra), could mean that your results might either be garbage, or simply only have an error of 0.1%.
- Boundary conditions... math can't get any more real than this, when it comes to simulations!
With luck, setting the wrong boundary conditions only means that it will simply take longer to converge. With bad luck, no convergence occurs; or even worse, converges but has no real physical meaning!
Example of the latter: I've had experiences with the good old OpenFOAM 1.5, where bad boundary conditions lead to residual convergence, even when the flow was piercing a hole in the mesh - where no hole should exist - therefore making all of the injected air go out in a blaze of glory through the hole that does not exist! - Relaxing variables (I can't remember the correct term )... although I'm all for a stress-free work environment... how on this Earth is relaxing a variable going to make virtual be more real? Wait... the word fuzzy comes to mind...
- LES or RAS... compressible or incompressible... Lagrangian or Euler... VOF or Multiphase... k-Epsilon or k-omega... viscous or non-viscous... CFD or flipping burgers at MacDonalds!?
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Small rants, to be continued... here: Small Rants, part 2
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