[CIG-SHORT] 2D Axis-Symmetric Volcanic Model

Scott Henderson sth54 at cornell.edu
Tue Nov 13 13:15:42 PST 2012


Hi Charles,

That is what I feared. It would certainly be a great feature for volcanic studies! So you can count at least one vote for a future addition ;)

Thanks,
Scott


On Nov 13, 2012, at 3:46 PM, Charles Williams <willic3 at gmail.com> wrote:

> Scott,
> 
> If you're asking if we have an axisymmetric formulation, the answer is no.  Thus far, we haven't had a huge demand for this.  The primary motivation would be volcanic problems where you have an idealized symmetric volcano (or a real volcano that is very symmetric).  To introduce an axisymmetric formulation we would need to write a bunch of new code (similar to what we've done for plane strain/plane stress).  There is a radius term in the axisymmetric formulation that complicates things.  I guess that if enough people were interested in this we would consider it, but for now I would just see what you can do reducing your domain to a quarter.
> 
> Charles
> 
> 
> On 14/11/2012, at 8:51 AM, Scott Henderson wrote:
> 
>> Hello,
>> 
>> If I am using Pylith to model a central spherical pressure source in a cube the set-up has lots of symmetry (e.g. Mogi model). I know that I can use mirror plane symmetry to run the calculation on a quarter of the full 3D cube (section 8.2.1 in the manual). But is there a way to incorporate an 'axis of symmetry' boundary condition in Pylith. I know commercial packages typically have this to reduce solid of rotation problems to 2D, but from what I understand the implementation is not as simple as assigning traction and displacement boundary conditions along the axis.
>> 
>> -Scott 
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> 
> Charles A. Williams
> Scientist
> GNS Science
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> 

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