Newbie to the Forum with Professional Physics Simulation Background

AI Thread Summary
A new forum member with a PhD and 20 years of professional experience in computer graphics and physics simulation introduces themselves. They express uncertainty about the appropriate section for sharing their work, specifically real-time interactive physics simulations. The member seeks guidance on where to post their content, suggesting the Computer Forum as a potential option. Their extensive background indicates a strong foundation in the subject matter. The discussion highlights the member's eagerness to contribute to the community.
voxilla
Messages
38
Reaction score
0
I have to admit I'm a newbie to this forum.
My background is computer graphics and physics simulation.
I'm not a student but have 20 years of professional experience and an academic background (phd).

Here some realtime inteactive physics simulations that may be interesting to you.

Could be there is a better section to put these, but I don't know.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
voxilla said:
I have to admit I'm a newbie to this forum.
My background is computer graphics and physics simulation.
I'm not a student but have 20 years of professional experience and an academic background (phd).

Here some realtime inteactive physics simulations that may be interesting to you.

Could be there is a better section to put these, but I don't know.
How about the Computer Forum?
 
Thread 'Question about pressure of a liquid'
I am looking at pressure in liquids and I am testing my idea. The vertical tube is 100m, the contraption is filled with water. The vertical tube is very thin(maybe 1mm^2 cross section). The area of the base is ~100m^2. Will he top half be launched in the air if suddenly it cracked?- assuming its light enough. I want to test my idea that if I had a thin long ruber tube that I lifted up, then the pressure at "red lines" will be high and that the $force = pressure * area$ would be massive...
I feel it should be solvable we just need to find a perfect pattern, and there will be a general pattern since the forces acting are based on a single function, so..... you can't actually say it is unsolvable right? Cause imaging 3 bodies actually existed somwhere in this universe then nature isn't gonna wait till we predict it! And yea I have checked in many places that tiny changes cause large changes so it becomes chaos........ but still I just can't accept that it is impossible to solve...

Similar threads

Back
Top