# LES filters

(Difference between revisions)
 Revision as of 18:53, 29 June 2009 (view source)Baldy (Talk | contribs)m← Older edit Latest revision as of 09:15, 3 January 2012 (view source)Peter (Talk | contribs) m (Reverted edits by Reverse22 (talk) to last revision by Baldy) (2 intermediate revisions not shown) Line 1: Line 1: - In [[Large eddy simulation]] (LES) only the large scale motions of the flow are solved for by filtering out the small and [[universal]] eddies. In practical applications of some [[#Subgrid-scale models|SGS models]], implicit filtering is done by the grid itself and programmers need not worry about the filtering operation. The values of velocity on the grid are the filtered values of velocity. However, for some SGS models, such as the [[Dynamic subgrid-scale model]] an explicit filtering step is required to compute the [[SGS stress]] tensor. Additionally, in the theoretical analysis of LES, filtering a function is defined as convoluting the function with a filtering kernel, just as is typically done in electrical engineering. + In [[Large eddy simulation]] (LES) only the large scale motions of the flow are solved for by filtering out the small and [[universal]] eddies. In practical applications of some [[SGS models]], implicit filtering is done by the grid itself and programmers need not worry about the filtering operation. The values of velocity on the grid are the filtered values of velocity. However, for some SGS models, such as the [[Dynamic subgrid-scale model]] an explicit filtering step is required to compute the [[SGS stress]] tensor. Additionally, in the theoretical analysis of LES, filtering a function is defined as convoluting the function with a filtering kernel, just as is typically done in electrical engineering. Some of the commonly used filters are defined below. In all cases, $\Delta$ is the filter width, $G(x)$ is the filtering kernel in physical space and $\widehat{G(k)}$ is the filtering kernel in [[Fourier transform|Fourier]]-[[wavenumber]] space. Some of the commonly used filters are defined below. In all cases, $\Delta$ is the filter width, $G(x)$ is the filtering kernel in physical space and $\widehat{G(k)}$ is the filtering kernel in [[Fourier transform|Fourier]]-[[wavenumber]] space.

## Latest revision as of 09:15, 3 January 2012

In Large eddy simulation (LES) only the large scale motions of the flow are solved for by filtering out the small and universal eddies. In practical applications of some SGS models, implicit filtering is done by the grid itself and programmers need not worry about the filtering operation. The values of velocity on the grid are the filtered values of velocity. However, for some SGS models, such as the Dynamic subgrid-scale model an explicit filtering step is required to compute the SGS stress tensor. Additionally, in the theoretical analysis of LES, filtering a function is defined as convoluting the function with a filtering kernel, just as is typically done in electrical engineering.

Some of the commonly used filters are defined below. In all cases, $\Delta$ is the filter width, $G(x)$ is the filtering kernel in physical space and $\widehat{G(k)}$ is the filtering kernel in Fourier-wavenumber space.

## Box filter

The Box filter is the same as the "grid filter" whereby the filter cuts off the values of the function beyond a half filter width away.

$G(x) = \frac{1}{\Delta} H\left( \frac{1}{2}\Delta -|x| \right)$

where H is the Heaviside function,

$\widehat{G(k)} = \frac{\sin \left (\frac{1}{2} k \Delta \right)}{ \frac{1}{2} k \Delta}$

## Gaussian filter

The Gaussian filter is a normalized Gaussian function. The Fourier transform of a Gaussian function is also a Gaussian, hence the G(x) and $\widehat{G(k)}$ have very similar forms,

$G(x) = \left( \frac{6}{\pi \Delta^2} \right)^{1/2} e^{ \frac{-6 x^2}{\Delta^2}}$

$\widehat{G(k)} = e^{ \frac{-k^2 \Delta^2}{24} }$