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Full Scale Simulation of SpaceX's Mars Rocket Engine
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All the comments and stories posted to Hacker News that reference this video.⬐ RoboTeddyhere's the video file: http://s3-2u.digitallyspeaking.com/assets/nvidia/events/gtc1...(in case you want to watch at 2x speed in VLC or something)
⬐ mbostock⬐ probdistYou can also watch it at 2x on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vYA0f6R5KAIIn case anyone's interest was piqued by the complicated reaction mechanisms involved in even relatively simple combustion problems, you can automatically generate these mechanisms using software called "Reaction Mechanism Generator" http://rmg.mit.edu/ produced by a group in MIT's department of Chemical Engineering.You wouldn't want to have to determine parameters and pathways for a 53 species 300+ reaction mechanism except in a highly automated fashion.
⬐ iwwrI don't know why the title was changed. The talk is by Adam Lichtl and Stephen Jones.It features computer fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations of combustion in an accessible manner, though naturally the details are quite complex under the cover.
Keywords, for people wanting to dip their toes: discrete wavelet transform, space partition schemes (BSP, quadrees, octrees), space-filling curves.
The point lookup technique was a little fuzzy and I'd like some more details if possible.
⬐ dang⬐ ranman> I don't know why the title was changed.The HN guidelines ask submitters not to change titles except when they are misleading or linkbait. Accordingly, we often change an edited title back to language used by the article itself—usually the original title, sometimes a subtitle or other heading. One reason for this is that we can't judge the accuracy of most edits.
HN titles also tend not to include the names of authors or speakers. We learned years ago that the site works better when emphasis is on content, not personalities.
(Submitted title was "SpaceX's GPU-Powered Combustion Simulation – Adam Lichtl and Stephen Jones")
I start at SpaceX on July 27th... I'm pretty stoked about that.⬐ xvf33⬐ manigandhamJust don't catch elon on his off days ;)⬐ xvf33⬐ e_modadLol truth hurts...Congrats!⬐ ranmanThanks! Hopefully I'll have a nice post about what it's like to work there.Over my head but still fascinating to watch (because I like space). Anyone have good intros to this kind of simulation stuff?⬐ bewuethr⬐ themgtA good general introduction to the topic is Strang's "Computational Science and Engineering" (http://bookstore.siam.org/WC07/) - basically numerical mathematics, but with applications in simulations for science and engineering.⬐ tanderson92I am not sure there is a good "intro" for a lot of this per se since many of these ideas tie to research topics in applied math. I will give a few books that seem to touch on areas related:* You first need a basic (or not so basic) numerical analysis course.
* For wavelets: Mallet's "A Wavelet Tour of Signal Processing"
* For spectral methods in general, a primer many people prefer is Trefethen's "Spectral Methods in MATLAB". It is introductory and you really should start here, but for its reliance on MATLAB and a matrix point of view it's not entirely practical.
* For GPU computing, a slightly advanced book is "The CUDA Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide to GPU Programming"
* For general-purpose parallel CPU computation: "Using MPI" by Gropp
Just heard him say they based this on wavelet CFD work by Johnathan Regele (basically GPU-optimizing: it)http://www.aere.iastate.edu/jregele/ http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10618560903117105
[edit: see Acknowledgements at the end]
⬐ verytrivialI understood 99% of that. I have chosen the wrong career.⬐ wavesumSo where was the engine? All we saw was simulation of flow from a triangular area that wasn't shaped anything like an engine nozzle.So yeah... was expecting an engine. Saw a 2-dimensional triangle. Dissappoint.
⬐ themgtWould I be right in assuming there's no open source CFD apps capable of the kind of demos he was doing? Any proprietary apps?⬐ None⬐ NoneNone⬐ chillingeffectOpenfoam and su2.None⬐ dikaiosuneTranscript?⬐ spacefightLaser Melting in space! Love it!⬐ backprojectionDoes anyone know why they don't use more modern directional representation systems, like curvelets, or shearlets?My understanding is that they provide optimally sparse representation of this type of data - data that's smooth except on these wavefront sets, and that wavelets perform comparatively poorly.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shearlet http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curvelet
⬐ netherMaybe a huge amount of legacy code using wavelets that's been debugged and experimentally validated. CFD code checking is laborious and errors often very subtle, and so tends to be pretty conservative.