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Posted:
1 decade ago
7 juin 2011, 16:39 UTC−4
What's your expression for the initial value? If it's a function respect with the space coordinate, you should use capital letter instead of lowercase one when ale is involved. For example, init (X), not init(x)
What's your expression for the initial value? If it's a function respect with the space coordinate, you should use capital letter instead of lowercase one when ale is involved. For example, init (X), not init(x)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
8 juin 2011, 14:32 UTC−4
Amazing! It works. Thanks a lot. But may I ask why?
Amazing! It works. Thanks a lot. But may I ask why?
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Posted:
1 decade ago
8 juin 2011, 14:32 UTC−4
Is it mentioned somewhere in the manual? Do I have to use upper cases of coordinates in boundary conditions, governing equations, or the moving velocity of ALE?
Is it mentioned somewhere in the manual? Do I have to use upper cases of coordinates in boundary conditions, governing equations, or the moving velocity of ALE?
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
9 juin 2011, 03:55 UTC−4
Hi
check the doc about "Frames" that is important to catch the subtle differences, otherwise you will have "great" suprises ;)
in v4 you have basicall "spatial", "material" and "mesh" Frames.
They start all overlapped and accessed by a lower case x,y,z.
Then depending on the physics they "split" hence upper and lower cases (lower case for spatial, upper case for material and mesh,
with ALE the mesh splits off too, hence x,y,z and X,Y,Z, and Xm,Ym...
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
check the doc about "Frames" that is important to catch the subtle differences, otherwise you will have "great" suprises ;)
in v4 you have basicall "spatial", "material" and "mesh" Frames.
They start all overlapped and accessed by a lower case x,y,z.
Then depending on the physics they "split" hence upper and lower cases (lower case for spatial, upper case for material and mesh,
with ALE the mesh splits off too, hence x,y,z and X,Y,Z, and Xm,Ym...
--
Good luck
Ivar
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Posted:
1 decade ago
15 avr. 2014, 18:39 UTC−4
hello,
does a init(r,z) also work in a 2D axisym problem?
or should it be a init(R,Z) definition?
init(x,y) is well plotted in the function definition, but I am not able to use it as initial values of my domain.
lukas
found the problem... meters and millimeters init(r*1000,z*1000) did it.
hello,
does a init(r,z) also work in a 2D axisym problem?
or should it be a init(R,Z) definition?
init(x,y) is well plotted in the function definition, but I am not able to use it as initial values of my domain.
lukas
found the problem... meters and millimeters init(r*1000,z*1000) did it.