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Computational Fluid Mechanics in Physics Graduate School

Posted: Fri Oct 31, 2014 7:16 pm
by gsbphy
If I want to do CFD in grad school, what fields should I be looking at? I like GR.

Re: Computational Fluid Mechanics in Physics Graduate School

Posted: Sat Nov 01, 2014 1:19 pm
by bfollinprm
Fluid dynamics, obviously. Cosmology/gravity, in simulating black-hole, neutron star mergers, etc. Biophysics. I'm sure there are more.

Re: Computational Fluid Mechanics in Physics Graduate School

Posted: Sat Nov 01, 2014 10:46 pm
by gsbphy
bfollinprm wrote:Fluid dynamics, obviously. Cosmology/gravity, in simulating black-hole, neutron star mergers, etc. Biophysics. I'm sure there are more.
bfollinprm! I've seen your posts a lot here lately - do you mind looking at the school list I've come up with so far?

(all for computational astrophysics + person i'd like to work most with)

Princeton (Pretorius)
Caltech (Ott)
Cornell (Teukolsky)
UIUC (Shapiro)
UCSC (Ramirez-Ruiz)

Do you have other schools to suggest? I'm afraid my list is a bit top-heavy!

Re: Computational Fluid Mechanics in Physics Graduate School

Posted: Sun Nov 02, 2014 11:24 am
by bfollinprm
Maryland and Michigan are other good options. I'm sorry I can't be super helpful here; I don't pay as much attention as I should to where all the good simulations are coming from (it does seem, however, that many of them are coming from Germany and Japan, so if either of those countries sound appealing, you might look into that).

Re: Computational Fluid Mechanics in Physics Graduate School

Posted: Sun Nov 02, 2014 4:18 pm
by gsbphy
bfollinprm wrote:Maryland and Michigan are other good options. I'm sorry I can't be super helpful here; I don't pay as much attention as I should to where all the good simulations are coming from (it does seem, however, that many of them are coming from Germany and Japan, so if either of those countries sound appealing, you might look into that).
Thanks! I'll be sure to look into those schools as well.

Re: Computational Fluid Mechanics in Physics Graduate School

Posted: Tue Nov 04, 2014 10:30 am
by Arbitrary
It appears to me that many times Fluid Dynamics hide within the realms of condensed matter, and particularly soft matter physics. You might want to look into the soft matter group at UChicago (Zhang, Irvine both do types of CFDs).

In addition, other good places to find CFD are geophysics (meteorology), non-linear phenomena (turbulence, econo-physics).
Hope this helps :)