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by doop
4599 days ago
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They might not be strictly Navier-Stokes but the way in which real fluids deviate from N-S is completely unlike the way in which lattice gas fluids deviate from N-S. Absolutely, you can discretize time and space and get a useful fluid model, and (as Wolfram showed in a very good paper in 1986) you don't even have to worry too much about isotropy, as long as your lattice obeys certain constraints. You do need Galilean invariance, though. Look, I do get your point about lattice gas fluids being interesting conceptually, and I do think they make an interesting point about how little you can get away with and still yield a useful fluid model at the macro scale, but I don't think they're a good example of a trend towards NKS-style methods. If anything the trend in that field since the late 90s has been away from NKS and towards seeing the lattice Boltzmann method as a solver for continuum treatments at the Boltzmann (rather than N-S) level. |
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Can you describe more how the deviations deviate? Specifically, how do these differences affect numerical solutions?
> If anything the trend in that field since the late 90s has been away from NKS and towards seeing the lattice Boltzmann method as a solver for continuum treatments at the Boltzmann (rather than N-S) level.
Also, which continuum are you referring to here? Number of particles? Lattice spacing?