This volume contains papers presented to a EUROMECH-Colloquium held in
Munich, September 30 to October 2, 1985. The Colloquium is number 199 in
a series of colloquia inaugurated by the European Mechanics Committee.
The meeting was jointly organized by the 'Lehrstuhl fur
Stromungsmechanik' at the 'Technische Universitat Munchen' and the
'Institut fur Physik der Atmosphare' of the 'Deutsche Forschungs- und
Versuchsanstalt fur Luft- und Raumfahrt' (DFVLR) in Oberpfaffenhofen.
'Direct' and 'large eddy simulation' are terms which denote two closely
con- nected methods of turbulence research. In a 'direct simulation'
(DS), turbu- lent motion is simulated by numerically integrating the
Navier-Stokes equations in three-dimensional space and as a function of
time. Besides ini- tial and boundary conditions no physical
simplifications are involved. Com- puter resources limit the resolution
in time and space, though simulations with an order of one million
discrete points in space are feasible. The simu- lated flow fields can
be considered as true realizations of turbulent flow fields and analysed
to answer questions on the basic behaviour of turbulence. Direct
simulations are valid as long as all the excited scales remain within
the band of resolved scales. This means that viscosity must be strong
enough to damp out the not resolved scales or the simulation is
restricted to a lim- ited integration-time interval only. In summary, DS
provides a tool to investigate turbulent motions from first principles
at least for a finite band of scales.