History of CFD
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*[[Historical perspective]] | *[[Historical perspective]] | ||
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*1985 - Use in "aero" industries (Boeing, General Electric, ...) | *1985 - Use in "aero" industries (Boeing, General Electric, ...) | ||
*1995 - Use in "non-aero" industries (GM, Ford, Astra, Ericsson...) | *1995 - Use in "non-aero" industries (GM, Ford, Astra, Ericsson...) | ||
+ | *2004 - OpenFOAM released under GPL license (free & open-source) | ||
{{stub}} | {{stub}} |
Latest revision as of 11:12, 4 January 2013
The purpose of this section is to provide a concise review of the history of CFD. A general Historical perspective summarizing the key milestones in CFD is presented. The Hall of fame includes short biographical scketches of the people who made significant contributions to CFD along with a summary of these contributions. The Famous achievements in CFD presents a list of crucial problems that were solved using CFD techniques.
Here are a few milestones in the early history of CFD:
- 1910 - Richardson, 50 page paper to Royal Society, hand calculations with human computers, 2000 operations per week...
- ~1960 - Scientific American articles on CFD
- 1965 - Marker and Cell methods - Harlow & Welch
- 1965 - Use in research and "grand challenges" (NASA, Los Alamos...)
- 1970 - Finite difference methods for Navier-Stokes
- 1970 - Finite element methods for stress analysis
- 1980 - Finite volume methods (Imperial College)
- 1985 - Use in "aero" industries (Boeing, General Electric, ...)
- 1995 - Use in "non-aero" industries (GM, Ford, Astra, Ericsson...)
- 2004 - OpenFOAM released under GPL license (free & open-source)