Magnus Ringh
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
2 years ago
2023年3月31日 GMT-4 08:02
Hi Kumar,
In a COMSOL Multiphysics text field for a load, for example, you can type any expression as a function of x or y, for example. Such as F0*x[1/m]
for an easy example of a force F0
defined as a constant in COMSOL Multiphysics; then this load varies linearly along a boundary that extends from 0 to 1 in the x-direction (I used the COMSOL unit syntax to "dedimensionalize" the x-coordinate so that the unit remains the one for a force). For boundaries that are not aligned with an axis, you can use the predefined surface-boundary parameterization variables s
, s1
, and s2
for defining distributed loads (see the documentation for more information). There are also plenty of other mathematical functions, geometric variables, and more for modeling many types of loads or other inputs. Just type it in!
Best regards,
Magnus
Hi Kumar,
In a COMSOL Multiphysics text field for a load, for example, you can type any expression as a function of *x* or *y*, for example. Such as `F0*x[1/m]` for an easy example of a force `F0` defined as a constant in COMSOL Multiphysics; then this load varies linearly along a boundary that extends from 0 to 1 in the *x*-direction (I used the COMSOL unit syntax to "dedimensionalize" the *x*-coordinate so that the unit remains the one for a force). For boundaries that are not aligned with an axis, you can use the predefined surface-boundary parameterization variables `s`, `s1`, and `s2` for defining distributed loads (see the documentation for more information). There are also plenty of other mathematical functions, geometric variables, and more for modeling many types of loads or other inputs. Just type it in!
Best regards,
Magnus