From rene.gassmoeller at mailbox.org Wed Mar 1 10:28:32 2017 From: rene.gassmoeller at mailbox.org (Rene Gassmoeller) Date: Wed, 1 Mar 2017 11:28:32 -0700 Subject: [CIG-CS] ASPECT 1.5.0 released Message-ID: <35834483-f4fb-e1d6-b2e8-1b751d8abd1e@mailbox.org> We are pleased to announce the release of ASPECT 1.5.0. ASPECT is the Advanced Solver for Problems in Earth's ConvecTion. It uses modern numerical methods such as adaptive mesh refinement, multigrid, and a modular software design to provide a fast, flexible, and extensible mantle convection solver. ASPECT is available from https://aspect.dealii.org/ and the release is available from https://github.com/geodynamics/aspect/releases/tag/v1.5.0 This release includes the following changes: - New: Choice between different formulations for the governing equations including Boussinesq and anelastic liquid approximation. - New: Melt transport (two-phase flow). - Particles: new generators, ghost exchange, performance improvements, interpolation to fields. - New: Nondimensional material model for incompressible (using the Boussinesq approximation) and compressible computations (with ALA or TALA) for nondimensionalized problems. This can be used for benchmark problems like Blankenbach, King, etc.. - New: Optional DG method for temperature/composition. - Adiabatic conditions: rework, now includes a reference density profile. - Free surface: overhaul. - New cookbooks: continental extension, finite strain, BurnMan interface, active tracers. - New benchmarks: TanGurnis, Blankenbach, King. - New: viscoplastic material model. - Material model interface cleanup. - Assembly performance improvements. - New: memory statistics postprocessor. - New: initial topography plugins. - Many other fixes and small improvements. A complete list of changes can be found at https://aspect.dealii.org/doc/doxygen/changes_between_1_84_80_and_1_85_80.html and the release is also available from https://github.com/geodynamics/aspect/releases/tag/v1.5.0 Wolfgang Bangerth, Juliane Dannberg, Rene Gassmoeller, Timo Heister, and many other contributors. -- Rene Gassmoeller http://www.math.colostate.edu/~gassmoel/