학술논문

Realizing the Vision of CFD in 2030
Document Type
Periodical
Source
Computing in Science & Engineering Comput. Sci. Eng. Computing in Science & Engineering. 24(1):64-70 Jan, 2022
Subject
Computing and Processing
Bioengineering
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computational modeling
Numerical models
Geometry
Analytical models
NASA
Atmospheric modeling
Predictive models
Language
ISSN
1521-9615
1558-366X
Abstract
In 2014, NASA released a report outlining a future state for aerospace computational fluid dynamics (CFD), the CFD Vision 2030 Study (the Study).1 Developed by experts from industry, government, and academia, the Study provided a forecast of CFD capabilities required for turbulent, transitional, and reacting flow simulations across a broad Mach number regime. In addition, the Study provided an aspirational role for future CFD as part of a routine, efficient, and physics-based aerospace design and development process. This future role of CFD was summarized in the Study as follows: “A single engineer/scientist must be able to conceive, create, analyze, and interpret a large ensemble of related simulations in a time-critical period (e.g., 24 hours), without individually managing each simulation, to a prespecified level of accuracy.”