1. A three-dimensional numerical simulation of turbulent flow in which large eddies (with scales smaller than the overall dimension of the problem in question) are resolved and the effects of subgrid-scale eddies, which are more universal in nature, are parameterized. Large eddies are important in characterizing one turbulent flow from another. The difference between a large eddy simulation and the traditional phenomenological modeling of turbulence is that in the latter case all scales of turbulent motion are parameterized. 2. A modeling technique in which spatial resolution extends into the inertial subrange, but does not resolve the smallest scales of motion. The effects of the latter are approximated using subgrid-scale models, which usually draw heavily on the Kolmogorov theory of the inertial subrange. See direct numerical simulation, very large eddy simulation.
- Partie du discours : noun
- Secteur d’activité/Domaine : Météo
- Catégorie : Météorologique
- Company: AMS
Créateur
- Kevin Bowles
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