Search
Now showing items 21-30 of 45
Qualitative Computer Studies of New n-Body Models of Atoms and Molecules: Preliminary Report
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1978)
We initiate in this first of a series of papers a new computer oriented approach to the modeling of atoms and molecules. Electron-electron charge interactions are included and several qualitative computations of electron ...
Discrete Solitary Waves
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1972)
Discrete Bars, Conductive Heat Transfer, and Elasticity
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1972)
An Arithmetic, Particle Theory of Fluid Dynamics
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1973)
Numerical Studies of Prototype Cavity Flow Problems
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1968)
Cavity Flow of a Particle Fluid
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1976)
A new, arithmetic, computer oriented approach to fluid modeling is developed and implemented. Fluids are simulated by finite particle sets which are subjected both to gravity and to molecular type force interactions. A ...
Simplification and Improvement of a Numerical Method for Navier-Stokes Problems
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1974)
Previously, a viable numerical method for the Navier-Stokes equations was developed and applied to two-dimensional, steady state problems, to three-dimensional, axially symmetric, steady state problems, and to a class of ...
Numerical Studies of Viscous, Incompressible Flow Through an Orifice for Arbitrary Reynolds Number
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1968)
Discrete Mechnics
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1968)
Discrete Mechanics - A General Treatment
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences, 1973)
A new numerical method for use in the solution of classical equations of motion is described, accurate to third-order in the coordinates and second-order in the velocities. The method has the unique property of preserving ...










