A numerical tool in MATLAB used to adapt three-dimensional conceptual models from ArcMap to TOUGH3

Author(s):  
José Alonso Aguilar-Ojeda ◽  
José Rubén Campos-Gaytán ◽  
Almendra Villela-Y-Mendoza ◽  
Claudia Soledad Herrera-Oliva ◽  
Jorge Ramírez-Hernández ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 77 (11) ◽  
pp. 3661-3681 ◽  
Author(s):  
John M. Peters ◽  
Hugh Morrison ◽  
Adam C. Varble ◽  
Walter M. Hannah ◽  
Scott E. Giangrande

AbstractResearch has suggested that the structure of deep convection often consists of a series of rising thermals, or “thermal chain,” which contrasts with existing conceptual models that are used to construct cumulus parameterizations. Simplified theoretical expressions for updraft properties obtained in Part I of this study are used to develop a hypothesis explaining why this structure occurs. In this hypothesis, cumulus updraft structure is strongly influenced by organized entrainment below the updraft’s vertical velocity maximum. In a dry environment, this enhanced entrainment can locally reduce condensation rates and increase evaporation, thus eroding buoyancy. For moderate-to-large initial cloud radius R, this breaks up the updraft into a succession of discrete pulses of rising motion (i.e., a thermal chain). For small R, this leads to the structure of a single, isolated rising thermal. In contrast, moist environments are hypothesized to favor plume-like updrafts for moderate-to-large R. In a series of axisymmetric numerical cloud simulations, R and environmental relative humidity (RH) are systematically varied to test this hypothesis. Vertical profiles of fractional entrainment rate, passive tracer concentration, buoyancy, and vertical velocity from these runs agree well with vertical profiles calculated from the theoretical expressions in Part I. Analysis of the simulations supports the hypothesized dependency of updraft structure on R and RH, that is, whether it consists of an isolated thermal, a thermal chain, or a plume, and the role of organized entrainment in driving this dependency. Additional three-dimensional (3D) turbulent cloud simulations are analyzed, and the behavior of these 3D runs is qualitatively consistent with the theoretical expressions and axisymmetric simulations.


2017 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 809-834 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugh Morrison

Abstract New theoretical analytic expressions are derived for the evolution of a passive scalar, buoyancy, and vertical velocity in growing, entraining moist deep convective updrafts. These expressions are a function of updraft radius, height, convective available potential energy (CAPE), and environmental relative humidity RH. They are quantitatively consistent with idealized three-dimensional moist updraft simulations with varying updraft sizes and in environments with differing RH. In particular, the analytic expressions capture the rapid decrease of buoyancy with height due to entrainment for narrow updrafts in a dry environment despite large CAPE. In contrast to the standard entraining-plume model, the theoretical expressions also describe the effects of engulfment of environmental air between the level of free convection (LFC) and height of maximum buoyancy (HMB) required by mass continuity to balance upward acceleration of updraft air (i.e., dynamic entrainment). This organized inflow sharpens horizontal gradients, thereby enhancing smaller-scale lateral turbulent mixing below the HMB. For narrow updrafts in a dry environment, this enhanced mixing leads to a negatively buoyant region between the LFC and HMB, effectively cutting off the region of positive buoyancy at the HMB from below so that the updraft structure resembles a rising thermal rather than a plume. Thus, it is proposed that a transition from plume-like to thermal-like structure is driven by dynamic entrainment and depends on updraft width (relative to height) and environmental RH. These results help to bridge the entraining-plume and rising-thermal conceptual models of moist convection.


2013 ◽  
Vol 54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mantas Landauskas

This paper discusses the concept of three-dimensional (3D) fractal interpolation and the possibility to use it in modeling 3D surfaces. It is important to notice that this paper treats fractal interpolation only as a numerical tool and not as a model. The purpose of the research is to create a methodology for obtaining models for the given 3D surface and making them similar to it to a certain degree. The set of models then can be investigated as required (3D graphical representation, simulation of particular technological process, quality assessment for bonded surfaces, etc.). Measuring a particular 3D surface and making a set of models is far more cost efficient than performing the measurements many times.


2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 645-657 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Knoerzer ◽  
Crispin Szydzik ◽  
Francisco Javier Tovar-Lopez ◽  
Xinke Tang ◽  
Arnan Mitchell ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (6) ◽  
pp. 720-730 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. L. Young ◽  
Y. T. Shen

The motivation of this work is to develop a numerical tool to explore a new propeller design with dual-cavitating characteristics, i.e., one that is capable of operating efficiently at low speeds in subcavitating (fully wetted) mode and at high speeds in the supercavitating mode. To compute the hydrodynamic performance, a three-dimensional (3D) potential-based boundary element method (BEM) is presented. The BEM is able to predict complex cavitation patterns and blade forces on fully submerged and partially submerged propellers in subcavitating, partially cavitating, fully cavitating, and ventilated conditions. To study the hydroelastic characteristic of potential designs, the 3D BEM is coupled with a 3D finite element method (FEM) to compute the blade stresses, deflections, and dynamic characteristics. An overview of the formulation for both the BEM and FEM is presented. The numerical predictions are compared to experimental measurements for the well-known Newton Rader (NR) three-bladed propeller series with varying pitch and blade area ratios. Comparison of the performance of the Newton Rader blade section to conventional blade sections is presented.


Solar Physics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 296 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadiia M. Kostogryz ◽  
Friedrich Kupka ◽  
Nikolai Piskunov ◽  
Damian Fabbian ◽  
Daniel Krüger ◽  
...  

AbstractWe aim to improve the accuracy of radiative energy transport in three-dimensional radiation hydrodynamical simulations in ANTARES (A Numerical Tool for Astrophysical RESearch). We implement in the ANTARES short-characteristics numerical schemes a modification of the Bézier interpolant solver. This method yields a smoother surface structure in simulations of solar convection and reduces the artifacts appearing due to the limited number of rays along which the integration is done. Reducing such artifacts leads to increased stability of the code. We show that our new implementation achieves a better agreement of the temperature structure and its gradient with a semi-empirical model derived from observations, as well as of synthetic spectral-line profiles with the observed solar spectrum.


1997 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. 563-580 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald P. Robin ◽  
R. Eric Reidenbach ◽  
Barry J. Babin

A basic interest in the Tightness and wrongness of actions predates philosophy, and the literature of organizational psychology indicates an increased interest in ethical and unethical decision-making in the workplace. Although several conceptual models of workplace ethical behavior have been offered, researchers have little guidance and few appropriate constructs for measuring a key component of these models. This paper focuses on the historical results of the Multidimensional Ethics Scale and construct of an ethical judgment and provides an exhaustive conceptual and empirical treatment of it. This analysis offers evidence for a three-dimensional structure underlying ethical judgments common to the workplace. The structure of the Multidimensional Ethics Scale is supported through an iterative approach which involves widely varying contexts and samples. Results have potential implications for developing theories of organizational ethics as well as for employees' psychological well-being.


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