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OpenFOAM (Open Field Operation And Manipulation) [8] is a C++ toolbox for the development of customized numerical solvers, and pre-/post-processing utilities for the solution of continuum mechanics problems, most prominently including computational fluid dynamics (CFD).
MFEM is a free, lightweight, scalable C++ library for finite element methods that features arbitrary high-order finite element meshes and spaces, support for a wide variety of discretizations, and emphasis on usability, generality, and high-performance computing efficiency.
CalculiX is a free and open-source finite-element analysis application that uses an input format similar to Abaqus.It has an implicit and explicit solver (CCX) written by Guido Dhondt and a pre- and post-processor (CGX) written by Klaus Wittig. [1]
A computer simulation of high velocity air flow around the Space Shuttle during re-entry A simulation of the Hyper-X scramjet vehicle in operation at Mach-7. The fundamental basis of almost all CFD problems is the Navier–Stokes equations, which define many single-phase (gas or liquid, but not both) fluid flows.
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ML.NET is a free software machine learning library for the C# programming language. [3] [4] The NAG Library has C# API. Commercially licensed. NMath by CenterSpace Software: Commercial numerical component libraries for the .NET platform, including signal processing (FFT) classes, a linear algebra (LAPACK & BLAS) framework, and a statistics package.
Since there is a section on the OpenFOAM advantages and disavantages as it was previously suggested, most notably the absence of a Graphical User Interface, probably it would be worth to add also a section to the available GUI for OpenFOAM, in particular the free ones as it can be very relevant and useful.
Advanced Simulation Library (ASL) is a free and open-source hardware-accelerated multiphysics simulation platform. It enables users to write customized numerical solvers in C++ and deploy them on a variety of massively parallel architectures , ranging from inexpensive FPGAs , DSPs and GPUs [ 1 ] up to heterogeneous clusters and supercomputers.