9783540853688-3540853685-Numerical Methods in Multidimensional Radiative Transfer

Numerical Methods in Multidimensional Radiative Transfer

ISBN-13: 9783540853688
ISBN-10: 3540853685
Edition: 2009
Author: Rolf Rannacher, Guido Kanschat, Erik Meinköhn, Rainer Wehrse
Publication date: 2008
Publisher: Springer
Format: Paperback 317 pages
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ISBN-13: 9783540853688
ISBN-10: 3540853685
Edition: 2009
Author: Rolf Rannacher, Guido Kanschat, Erik Meinköhn, Rainer Wehrse
Publication date: 2008
Publisher: Springer
Format: Paperback 317 pages

Summary

Numerical Methods in Multidimensional Radiative Transfer (ISBN-13: 9783540853688 and ISBN-10: 3540853685), written by authors Rolf Rannacher, Guido Kanschat, Erik Meinköhn, Rainer Wehrse, was published by Springer in 2008. With an overall rating of 4.4 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Numerical Methods in Multidimensional Radiative Transfer (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Traditionally, radiative transfer has been the domain of astrophysicists and climatologists. In nuclear technology one has been dealing with the ana- gous equations of neutron transport. In recent years, applications of radiative transferincombustionmachinedesignandinmedicinebecamemoreandmore important. In all these disciplines one uses the radiative transfer equation to model the formation of the radiation ?eld and its propagation. For slabs and spheres e?ective algorithms for the solution of the transfer equation have been ava- able for quite some time. In addition, the analysis of the equation is quite well developed. Unfortunately, in many modern applications the approximation of a 1D geometry is no longer adequate and one has to consider the full 3D dependencies. This makes the modeling immensely more intricate. The main reasons for the di?culties result from the fact that not only the dimension of the geometric space has to be increased but one also has to employ two angle variables (instead of one) and very often one has to consider frequency coupling (due to motion or redistribution in spectral lines). In actual cal- lations this leads to extremely large matrices which, in addition, are usually badly conditioned and therefore require special care. Analytical solutions are not available except for very special cases. Although radiative transfer problems are interesting also from a ma- ematical point of view, mathematicians have largely neglected the transfer equation for a long time.
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