Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 18
pro vyhledávání: '"Kyle A. Brucker"'
Autor:
Kyle A. Brucker, Sutanu Sarkar
Publikováno v:
Journal of Fluid Mechanics. 652:373-404
Direct numerical simulations (DNS) of axisymmetric wakes with canonical towed and self-propelled velocity profiles are performed atRe= 50 000 on a grid with approximately 2 billion grid points. The present study focuses on a comparison between towed
Publikováno v:
Journal of Fluid Mechanics. 630:191-223
Direct numerical simulations (DNS) are performed to investigate the behaviour of a weakly stratified shear layer in the presence of a strongly stratified region beneath it. Both, coherent Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) rollers and small-scale turbulence, ar
Publikováno v:
Journal of Computational Physics. 225:20-32
The Rogallo (1981) algorithm for simulating homogeneous turbulent shear flow solves the equations on a mesh that in physical space deforms with the mean flow. Eventually, when the mesh reaches a particular degree of deformation, the coordinate system
Autor:
Kyle A. Brucker, Joseph Majdalani
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer. 48:4779-4796
This work explores the porous block paradigm based on replacing an actual heat sink by the volume of fluid that once enveloped the fins. Thermal equivalence is achieved by increasing the thermal conductivity of the lumped fluid above the base plate u
Autor:
Kyle A. Brucker, Joseph Majdalani
Publikováno v:
IEEE Transactions on Components and Packaging Technologies. 26:158-164
In this study an asymptotic technique is presented for calculating the equivalent thermal conductivity of a compact heat sink model. The method uses the known Nusselt number correlation given by Churchill and Chu (1975) for both laminar and turbulent
Autor:
Christine Ikeda, Kyle A. Brucker, Donald C. Wyatt, Douglas G. Dommermuth, Thomas T. O'Shea, Carolyn Q. Judge, Thomas C. Fu
Publikováno v:
Volume 8B: Ocean Engineering.
Numerical simulations of wedge impact experiments, undertaken by the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division, NSWCCD, and more recently by the United States Naval Academy, USNA, Hydromechanics Laboratory, were performed using the computation
Autor:
Thomas T. O'Shea, Sheguang Zhang, Carolyn Q. Judge, Woei-Min Lin, Kyle A. Brucker, Douglas G. Dommermuth, Jonathan Ward, Donald C. Wyatt, Allen Engle, Kenneth M. Weems
The focus of this paper is to describe and document a recent effort to assess these numerical codes for the prediction of deep-V planing craft hydrodynamic forces and moments and evaluate how well NFA models the complex multiphase flows associated wi
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::0109e728233a38f14c55a5efb99d23d6
https://doi.org/10.21236/ada571594
https://doi.org/10.21236/ada571594
Autor:
Ann M. Powers, Donald C. Wyatt, Kyle A. Brucker, Douglas G. Dommermuth, Thomas T. O'Shea, William R. Story, Dominic J. Piro, Thomas C. Fu, Ann M. Fullerton, Edward A. Devine
The Joint High Speed Sealift (JHSS) segmented model (Model 5663) tests performed in 2007 at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division (NSWCCD) were designed to provide a large data set for validation of numerical simulations. The segmented mod
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::c1ca8589655fe847a4d17bb6f85391eb
https://doi.org/10.21236/ada576106
https://doi.org/10.21236/ada576106
Autor:
Kyle A. Brucker, Douglas G. Dommermuth, Thomas T. O'Shea, Dick K. P. Yue, Kelli Hendrickson, Gabriel Weymouth
Publikováno v:
Other repository
The primary purpose of our research efforts is to improve naval design and detection capabilities. Our current research efforts leverage high performance computing (HPC) resources to perform high-resolution numerical simulations with hundreds-of-mill
Autor:
Kelli Hendrickson, Kyle A. Brucker, Thomas T. O'Shea, Douglas G. Dommermuth, Kristine L. Chevalier, Dick K. P. Yue, Gabriel Weymouth
Publikováno v:
2009 DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program Users Group Conference.
The primary purpose of our research efforts is to improve naval design and detection capabilities. Our current research efforts leverage high performance computing (HPC) resources to perform high-resolution numerical simulations with hundreds-of-mill