Researchers helped Europe’s fastest supercomputer, JUPITER, achieve energy efficiency of 60 billion operations/watt by simulating how water droplets react to supersonic shockwaves. Droplet flattens like a pancake when hit by shockwave and breaks apart to form swirling structures called vortex rings. These droplet and vortex behaviours are critical when designing high-speed aircraft or missiles.
short by
Ankit Tiwari /
03:22 pm on
16 Jul