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Mesh requirements to accurately calculate mass properties
Posted 2015年9月16日 GMT-4 22:41 Mesh, Parameters, Variables, & Functions, Results & Visualization, Studies & Solvers Version 5.0 2 Replies
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I am trying to model the rotation of a dipole in an electric field. I am using mass properties to determine the moment of inertia, etc of the dipole. I kept getting a divide by 0 error so I've looked at the values that have been calculated and compared them to analytic values.
the calculation of the mass and moment of inertia are both out by 15 orders of magnitude! The COM is non-zero in both the x- and y-axes (the dipole is symmetrically positioned in the centre of the geometry).
I have tried shrinking the mesh, which changes the values, but not significantly. Halving the maximum element size of the mesh basically doubled the calculated mass and moment of inertia. Does this mean I have decrease the maximum element size by 15 orders of magnitude (which is obviously not actually going to be possible) before the calculated values will be correct?! Is there some threshold where the calculation will suddenly become accurate?
the calculation of the mass and moment of inertia are both out by 15 orders of magnitude! The COM is non-zero in both the x- and y-axes (the dipole is symmetrically positioned in the centre of the geometry).
I have tried shrinking the mesh, which changes the values, but not significantly. Halving the maximum element size of the mesh basically doubled the calculated mass and moment of inertia. Does this mean I have decrease the maximum element size by 15 orders of magnitude (which is obviously not actually going to be possible) before the calculated values will be correct?! Is there some threshold where the calculation will suddenly become accurate?
2 Replies Last Post 2015年9月17日 GMT-4 05:09