SOLVING THREE-DIMENSIONAL POTENTIAL FLOW PROBLEMS BY MEANS OF AN INVERSE FORMULATION AND FINITE DIFFERENCES

A finite difference method is developed to solve the three-dimensional, steady, incompressible, potential flow equations obtained by using a potential function, phi, and two mutually orthogonal stream functions, psi and psi(star), to describe the flow. Problems are formulated in an inverse space where the potential function and the two stream functions are the independent variables, and the Cartesian coordinates x, y, and z are the dependent variables. The boundaries of the problem in the physical space, including the free surface, have known positions in the inverse space, so trial and error adjustments to the positions of the boundaries are unnecessary. Methods of describing the effect of the placement of a body, whose shape is partially specified, in the flow field are developed using finite differences, and a solution for the x-, y-, and z-coordinates is obtained at each grid point formed by the intersection of surfaces held constant with respect to phi, psi, and psi(star) in the inverse space. (Author)

  • Corporate Authors:

    Utah Water Research Laboratory

    8200 Old Main Hill
    Logan, UT  United States  84322-8200
  • Authors:
    • DAVIS, A L
    • Jeppson, R W
  • Publication Date: 1973-3

Media Info

  • Pagination: 50 p.

Subject/Index Terms

Filing Info

  • Accession Number: 00048073
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Source Agency: National Technical Information Service
  • Report/Paper Numbers: PRWG-96-2
  • Contract Numbers: N00014-67-A-0220-000
  • Files: TRIS
  • Created Date: Nov 14 1973 12:00AM