The conceptualization of a problem (modeling) and the computational solution of this problem (simulation), is the foundation of Computational Science. This coupled endeavor is unique in several respects. It allows practically any complex system to be analyzed with predictive capability by invoking t
[Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering] Multiscale Modeling and Simulation in Science Volume 66 || Complex Band Structures of Spintronics Materials
✍ Scribed by Engquist, Björn; Lötstedt, Per; Runborg, Olof
- Book ID
- 120296171
- Publisher
- Springer Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- German
- Weight
- 563 KB
- Edition
- 2009
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 3540888578
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Most problems in science involve many scales in time and space. An example is turbulent ?ow where the important large scale quantities of lift and drag of a wing depend on the behavior of the small vortices in the boundarylayer. Another example is chemical reactions with concentrations of the species varying over seconds and hours while the time scale of the oscillations of the chemical bonds is of the order of femtoseconds. A third example from structural mechanics is the stress and strain in a solid beam which is well described by macroscopic equations but at the tip of a crack modeling details on a microscale are needed. A common dif?culty with the simulation of these problems and many others in physics, chemistry and biology is that an attempt to represent all scales will lead to an enormous computational problem with unacceptably long computation times and large memory requirements. On the other hand, if the discretization at a coarse level ignoresthe?nescale informationthenthesolutionwillnotbephysicallymeaningful. The in?uence of the ?ne scales must be incorporated into the model. This volume is the result of a Summer School on Multiscale Modeling and S- ulation in Science held at Boso ¤n, Lidingo ¤ outside Stockholm, Sweden, in June 2007. Sixty PhD students from applied mathematics, the sciences and engineering parti- pated in the summer school.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Self-organisation, Self-regulation, Self-repair, And Self-maintenance Are Promising Conceptual Approaches To Deal With The Ever Increasing Complexity Of Distributed Interacting Software And Information Handling Systems. Self-organising Applications Are Able To Dynamically Change Their Functionality