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Best OSS CFD Package For High School Physics?

RobHart writes "I am teaching a 'physics of flight' unit to grade 11 Physics students. Part of the unit will have the students running tests on several aerofoils in a wind tunnel. I also want to expose them to a Computational Fluid Dynamics package which will allow them to contrast experimental results with those produced by the CFD package. There are a number of open source CFDs available (Windows- or Linux-based are both fine), but I don't have much time to evaluate which are the simplest to use in terms of setting up the mesh, initial conditions, etc. — a very important issue as students do not have much time in this unit." Can anyone offer insight about ease of use for programs in this niche?

2 of 105 comments (clear)

  1. 'Ease of use' relative by multimediavt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've taught computational fluid dynamics and molecular dynamics workshops to university faculty members and can say this: You need to setup the examples for them to play with BEFORE class. There's really no such thing as an easy to use CFD or MD package, especially when looking at what it takes to setup initial conditions. I would strongly recommend that you do a good deal of the leg work, especially for participants that do not have the mathematical background or a background in fluid dynamics, period. It will only help you in the end.

    This link will take you to lists of free and free-to-academics CFD codes, but the free ones are really, really bare bones in a lot of cases when it comes to UI. I would not turn high school students loose on these codes without pre-determined examples.

  2. Re:Learning vs Exposure by Thelasko · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Playing around with flow simulations and seeing how changes in geometry affect flow is fun

    Agreed, but I'm afraid that playing with CFD will just leave the students frustrated and convinced that physics doesn't work because they can't get CFD to work. I remember kids in high school, (even some in college) deciding that physics doesn't work because they couldn't get newton's laws of motion to match the results they observed experimentally. In reality, they didn't do their math correctly.

    If the author want's to quickly demonstrate the principles of fluid mechanics to his/her students here is my plan:
    1) Make sure they have a firm grasp on Newton's laws of motion.
    2) Have them drop a paperclip and a coffee filter from the same height and measure how long it takes them to hit the floor.
    3) Explain to them that this is the effect of aerodynamic drag.
    I performed the same experiment in college physics. It's quick and effective.

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