Computational Thermal Sciences - NEW FOR 2009

An International Journal 

Computational Thermal Sciences

Editor-in-Chief

Graham de Vahl Davis
University of NSW

Editor-in-Chief

Ivan Egorov
Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute

Associate Editor

Eduard Vasilevskiy
Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute (TsAGI)

Associate Editor

Eddie Leonardi
Computational Fluid Dynamics Research Laboratory, School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia 2052

Editorial Board

click on link to see the list

AIMS AND SCOPE

Computational Thermal Sciences is a new international journal designed to provide a forum for the exposure and exchange of ideas, methods and results in computational thermodynamics, fluid dynamics, heat transfer and mass transfer in solids, liquids and gases, with applications in areas such as energy, materials processing, manufacturing and the environment. All modes of heat and mass transfer will be included: conduction, convection, diffusion, radiation and phase change. Topics to be covered will also include the laws of thermodynamics, the thermal properties of substances, engine and refrigeration cycles and combustion.
Papers on all aspects — both fundamental and applied — will be welcome: on the one hand the development of new mathematical methods and computational algorithms, and on the other the application of new or existing methods to the solution of problems in the thermal sciences. Reports of experimental studies undertaken in conjunction with computational work are encouraged. The assessment of the accuracy of computational solutions through verification (examining and limiting errors associated with discretization and with the computational solution methods adopted) and validation (quantification of errors in the physical models used) are essential parts of any computational study, and authors will be expected to examine these aspects.

ISSN: 1940-2503 Print
ISSN: 1940-2554 Online

ISSN 1940-2503; 1940-2554

Issues per year: 4

For Online Access