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Digital Fluid Mechanics Laboratory: Sudden Expansion Pressure Loss

We asked engineering students at Duke to numerically simulate flow through a sudden expansion using a digital fluid mechanics lab. At the end of the project, students understood the physical limitations associated with the experiment and gained experience using Wolfram Language. The digital nature of this exercise can be used in any course when physical experimentation is challenged by nuance like the observer effect.

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Channels: Wolfram Technology Conference 2022

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110 videos match your search.
Daniele Ceravolo
Using Wolfram Language, we can explore information provided by a raft of data reporting within enterprise systems to better to find patterns and insights for companies. Wolfram Language can import, ...
Christopher Cooley
Have you ever wanted to share your Wolfram Language code with colleagues or sell your code to the public? The Wolfram standalone applications project is working on making it easy ...
August Frechette, Zbigniew J. Kabala
We asked engineering students at Duke to numerically simulate flow through a sudden expansion using a digital fluid mechanics lab. At the end of the project, students understood the physical ...
Brian Van Vertloo
Paul Abbott
The 3-4 week Wolfram Summer School Educational Innovation track provides hands-on Wolfram Language training, extensive high-quality mentoring from experts and Wolfram Research developers sharing their experience in making educational technologies and quality feedback from other like-minded educators. In this presentation I will give an overview of the Wolfram Summer School ...
Flavio B.Gonzaga
This presentation shows a detailed view of SearchOnMath, a search engine specializing in formulas and text from domains with math content. It includes the ability to search arXiv preprints and ...
Rob Knapp
Working with arrays is fundamental to efficient use of Wolfram Language and appears in almost any computation. The basic representation for an array is a nested list, but there are ...
Jason Biggs
This talk presents a set of paclets available from the new Wolfram Paclet Repository that extend the chemistry functionality in the Wolfram Language. Exhaustively generate isomers from a chemical formula using the MAYGEN or surge libraries, perform semi-empirical quantum chemistry using MOPAC, generate new and novel compounds ...
Christopher Cole
Colin Chapman
This talk defines the Extreme Citizen Science learning posture and applies it to the development of a Polarimeter from scratch using an Arduino microcontroller and the ModelPlug library in Wolfram ...
Tim Shedelbower
One of many wonderful components waiting to be discovered in Wolfram Language is powerful graphics. I will share some of my techniques developed to harness this power for documentation illustrations and marketing images. Learn style, lighting ...
Markus van Almsick
Ali Mili
In this talk, we discuss a tool that derives the function of a C-like program by mapping it onto a mathematical equation formulated in Mathematica syntax. This approach can help ...
Bob Sandheinrich
The Wolfram Language Paclet Repository is here! This talk shows how to use the paclet definition notebook to help develop a paclet and prepare it for publication or distribution.
Nina Dokeva

This talk will discuss the global optimization functionality in Wolfram Language. It builds upon the convex and convertible to convex optimization functionality developed previously and extends to functionality for solving ...
Ankit Naik, Jan Brugard
Investigate novel concepts for power production, understand energy markets and balance the grid using Wolfram System Modeler. In this presentation, we will use a simplified model of Sweden's power system ...
Adam Strzebonski
The upcoming release of Mathematica includes significant performance improvements in polynomial algebra functions and in linear algebra for matrices of univariate polynomials. The release also includes functionality extensions in polynomial ...
Noah Hardwicke
Implemented in top-level Wolfram Language code, the new notebook toolbar used existing features of the desktop front end to produce an interface with unique structure and function. In this talk ...
Brenton Bostick
Instrumentation` is a new CodeTools package that automates instrumentation of Wolfram Languagecode for common software engineering tasks such as profiling and code coverage reporting. This talk will show how to ...
Jonathan Heinz
Polaris-M was written in Mathematica as the first tool for analyzing interactions within optical systems by using real-world data and scientifically proven modeling. This presentation examines functions and displays written ...