This volume contains the proceedings of a NATO Advanced Study Institute
which was held in Alghero, Sardinia, in July 1991. The development of
computers in the recent years has lead to the emergence of
unconventional ideas aiming at solving old problems. Among these, the
possibility of computing directly fluid flows from the trajectories of
constituent particles has been much exploited in the last few years:
lattice gases cellular automata and more generally Molecular Dynamics
have been used to reproduce and study complex flows. Whether or not
these methods may someday compete with more traditional approaches is a
question which cannot be answered at the present time: it will depend on
the new computer architectures as well as on the possibility to develop
very simple models to reproduce the most complex phenomena taking place
in the approach of fully developed turbulence or plastic flows. In any
event, these molecular methods are already used, and sometimes in an
applied engineering context, to study strong shock waves, chemistry
induced shocks or motion of dislocations in plastic flows, that is in
domains where a fully continuum description appears insufficient. The
main topic of our Institute was the molecular simulations of fluid
flows. The project to hold this Institute was made three years ago, in
the summer of 1989 during a NATO workshop in Brussels on the same
subject.