You have to define participating solids, seed points, and vectors from which streamlines are computed as well as the integration direction There are various methods to generate seed points. Had you considered doing it as a source term To find out flight time i think you put in a source term of density (it's in one of the examples) Thus you can see how long it takes to get from the inlet to a point. In this ntop live, maiki vlahinos, senior application engineer at ntop, demonstrates how to setup a workflow in ntop to prepare your designs for cfd simulations in ansys.
As the computational particle moves along this streamline, an additional auxiliary dependent variable is used to monitor the time for each particle as it moves through the domain and gets to the outlet boundary. Cfd streamline is a comprehensive reference for computational fluid dynamics (cfd) and its application accross the engineering areas, mainly focusing on aerospace and automotive. Separately setting each component to zero gives three differential equations which define the streamline The three velocity components u, v, w, must be given as functions of x, y, z before these equations can be integrated. In geometry tab of streamline select the variable as “velocity” and in the color tab select “time” Please refer attached screen shot
Use the surface streamlines tool to create streamlines on surfaces with given seeds. Explore streamlines for stunning cfd data visualization Master techniques to create, customize, and interpret streamlines, revealing intricate flow patterns and dynamics.
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