DocumentCode
2157079
Title
Preliminary comparison of physical and numerical simulations of hydrodynamic forces on underwater vehicles
Author
Curtis, Timothy L.
Author_Institution
Ocean Eng. Res. Center, Memorial Univ. of Newfoundland, St. John´´s, Nfld., Canada
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
480
Lastpage
484
Abstract
During cruising and maneuvering, the hydrodynamic loads induced on underwater vehicles can be readily modeled and calculated using numerical (virtual) tanks. However, the results obtained from any numerical simulation should not be completely trusted unless satisfactory validation and quality assurance of the numerical results are obtained. To achieve a high degree of confidence in a virtual tank, the numerical results must be compared with experimental data (either laboratory or field data). The main goal of the paper is to present direct comparisons between the numerical results obtained from explicit finite element simulations and the results of physical model tests. The numerical simulations were conducted using a combination of two packages of commercial software, the ANSYS and LS-DYNA finite element codes. The physical experiments were conducted using the Marine Dynamic Test Facility, at the Institute for Marine Dynamics of the National Research Council of Canada
Keywords
finite element analysis; testing; underwater vehicles; ANSYS; Institute for Marine Dynamics; LS-DYNA; Marine Dynamic Test Facility; National Research Council of Canada; cruising; explicit finite element simulations; hydrodynamic forces; maneuvering; model tests; numerical simulations; physical simulations; virtual tanks; Finite element methods; Hydrodynamics; Laboratories; Numerical simulation; Packaging; Quality assurance; Software packages; Testing; Underwater vehicles; Vehicle dynamics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Underwater Technology, 2000. UT 00. Proceedings of the 2000 International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Tokyo
Print_ISBN
0-7803-6378-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/UT.2000.852591
Filename
852591
Link To Document