Nabla1
Electrical
- Dec 26, 2007
- 32
I have recently acquired access to Solidworks 2007, and through a growing interest in fluid dynamics, I have realized that in aerospace engineering it can often be necessary to design fairly complex 3D surfaces, for example in designing airfoils and compressor blades.
CFD aside, suppose I were to crunch some numbers, and arrive at a mathematical function, f(x,y), describing a surface in 3D space. This surface would have been derived to be the most optimal surface to use for a compressor blade, under a certain set of fluid flow conditions.
Is it possible to input such mathematical functions into Solidworks (specifying the range of the function) to produce certain 'function-specific' surfaces or splines, for use with construction?
e.g. something like f(x,y) = sinx cosy (0<x<5,0<y<3), specifying a temporary axis, which the inequalities would refer to.
Thank you.
CFD aside, suppose I were to crunch some numbers, and arrive at a mathematical function, f(x,y), describing a surface in 3D space. This surface would have been derived to be the most optimal surface to use for a compressor blade, under a certain set of fluid flow conditions.
Is it possible to input such mathematical functions into Solidworks (specifying the range of the function) to produce certain 'function-specific' surfaces or splines, for use with construction?
e.g. something like f(x,y) = sinx cosy (0<x<5,0<y<3), specifying a temporary axis, which the inequalities would refer to.
Thank you.