Say “modeling” not “simulation”

24.07.2017
modeling simulation front FEM

Richard M. Stallman, founder and president of the Free Software Foundation and founding father of the GNU Project, has a long been repeating “say GNU, not Linux” although he has not had much success. In the same sense, from this corner of the world I will begin a similar battle. I claim “say modeling, do not say simulation” when referring to solving engineering problems—solid or fluid mechanics,1 thermal conduction, radiation transport, electromagnetism, etc.— using computational mechanics techniques. At least when the equations are deterministic instead of stochastic.

There are many companies and/or products that have the word “simulation” embedded in their names (e.g. SimsolidSimuliaSimscaleSimulationHubSim4DesignAweSimSim & Tec, just to name a few). There is even a category Simulation in Onshape’s App StoreAlan Kay used this word to refer to computing strains and stresses in a bridge using Sketchpad back in the sixties during a recent MOOC at Stanford.2 There is a hashtag #SimulationFriday on Twitter. And it is fashion an sexy to refer to the “democratization of simulation,” whatever that means. However, we at Seamplex (and within our product CAEplexexplicitly avoid this term and favor the word modeling instead, which implies a mathematical abstraction of a real physical system. Here is why.

When I hear the term “simulation” I tend to think of someone trying to fake or to pretend something that is not true. And analyzing a physical system that has some kind of engineering interest, let us say for the sake of illustration the safety analysis of a Nuclear Power Plant, is a very serious issue and should by no means be related to a “fake.” It involves solving complex deterministic mathematical models (i.e. equations) using a collection of assumptions and simplifications that rely on a wide variety of engineering knowledge and expertise. It is far away from “pretending” (i.e. “simulating”) we are doing something that we are not, although we might start with this idea at the very lower physical level as the following story illustrates.

The Chicago Pile-1

Back in the 1940s, Enrico Fermi started to wonder whether a self-sustained fission reaction was possible. So he and his team started to study how these brand-new particles discovered by James Chadwick and called neutrons behaved. And it turned out that neutrons are not deterministic but rather statistic in nature. They wonder from here to there and they interact with nuclei more or less randomly, although the probabilities of different reactions are well-defined and can be measured. Having a significant amount (trillions) of neutrons greatly decreases the statistical variance so at the end of the day, deterministic calculations may be used. If you played one trillion hands of double-deck blackjack you would have gotten exactly 64/1339≈4.7797…%64/1339≈4.7797…%naturals. It was in this way (the variance reduction, not the cards) how Fermi was able to achieve criticality—a term which we will revisit below—in the Chicago Pile-1 using paper and pencil.

banner

The Chicago Pile-1

The Chicago Pile-1

The Montecarlo method

A couple of years later, a number of people gathered together in New Mexico to work in a tiny little project called Manhattan. These guys started using Fermi’s neutron diffusion equation, but they soon realized that in some experiments they did not have enough neutrons to overcome the statistical variance. So Stanislaw Ulam developed a computation method based on tracking individual neutrons taking their statistical nature into account. Hence, the modern Montecarlo Method was born, named of course after the casino, that bring us back to blacjack somehow.

Remark #1 All those consultants that claim to perform “Montecarlo Calculations” ought to know that they borrowed that term from the nuclear industry.

Remark #2 All those startups that say “critical mass” to mean “a reasonable number of clients” ought to know that they borrowed that term also from the nuclear industry.

banner

Remark #3 Luckily, the original Montecarlo Method was contemporary to the incipient development of electronic computers that allowed an efficient way of statistically modeling individual neutrons through their random paths.

Remark #4 Also luckily was the fact that the birth of the nuclear industry was a couple of years before the rise of the space exploration program, otherwise astronauts would have been fried by invisible and mysterious reasons (i.e. high-energy gamma radiation and sub-atomic charged particles).

Buffon’s needle

Long before neutrons, Count Buffon proved that if one has a long table of length “L” over which transversal lines separated by a length “d” are drawn and a stick (needle) of length “ℓ” is randomly thrown over the table, then the probability “p” that the stick crosses one line is (for ℓ<dℓ<d)

C:\Users\BorrasSubiranaF\Google Drive\tribonet\OtherPosts\Say “modeling” not “simulation”\buffond needle.png

Buffon’s needle

So, it is hard to avoid the temptation of grabbing a computer and start throwing (virtual) sticks over the table. Using wasora, we can simulate throwing a stick over the table as many times as we want:

 

See the Buffon’s needle problem in the wasora Real Book for further details.

This is the classical Montecarlo approach, and as such—getting into the main point of this article—it is a proper usage of the term “simulation.” Why? Because we are making a direct analogy between the physical act of throwing sticks over a table and taking sample from a pseudo-random number generator.3 We are “pretending” to do something we are not really doing (throwing sticks) with a mathematical analogy that lives inside a computer (taking a random number and pretending it is the location and angle of the thrown stick).

Computing \pi by simulationComputing π by simulation

Mechanical analysis of a piston rod

Let us now switch our attention to the following problem. We have a mechanical part, say from the automotive industry, and we want to find out how it behaves under operational loads. We first start by getting the 3D CAD model (or building one ourselves using either FreeCAD or Onshape for example). Then we fire up a computational tool based on the finite element method, define the problem, create a mesh, run a solver and see the results.

To further illustrate my point, let us consider CAEplex tutorial (which is the same as Simscale’s first tutorial):

Interact with it here.

Some people would say that this is a “virtual simulation” or even a “virtual experiment.”4 I beg to differ. I fail to see what the distribution of the Von Mises Stresses in the above connecting rod obtained as a result of a set of equations that contain many assumptions and idealizations (i.e. models that are beyond the scope of this opinion article) has to do with “simulation.” All we did was to solve a set of deterministic equations that are a variation of the ones proposed by Sir Isaac Newton mixed up with some mathematical models (i.e. Hooke’s law) and draw the results with colors. We have not faked anything. We have not pretended we did something we did not do.

Thermal modeling

In a similar sense, in the following picture we can see the results of a thermal model of a piston head, not a simulation:

Thermal model of a piston solved by finoThermal model of a piston solved by finoThe same problem solved by CALCULIX through SimscaleThe same problem solved by CALCULIX through Simscale

We already have visited this issue earlier this year by commenting an article by Ora Research regarding The Uber Cloud Experiment5:

Twitter comment

Say “simulation” only if you are “simulating”

Of course you are free to say whatever you want to say. I am not as stubborn as RMS is. But let me propose the following helper table:

Problem Simulation Modeling
Blackjack LibreBlackjack Blackjack Suite
Neutronics Helios++ milonga
Mechanics z88code_asterXC
Thermal finoCALCULIX
CFD OpenFOAMPETSc-FEM

Of course, whatever name you decide to call it, please always do use free and open source programs. Stay away from privative software—especially regarding engineering analysis—because it first takes away your freedom and then it prevents from understanding, sharing and modifying the equations that contain the models you are relying on. And comment this article below to state your opinion!

  1. There is a generalized idea that “FEA” (Finite-Element Analysis) means “structural analysis” whilst “CFD” (Computational Fluid Dynamics) means fluid mechanics problems. The latter is almost right, thought steady-state fluid problems fall into this category too. But the former is wrong, because the Finite Element Method is a general mathematical concept that may be used to solve a wide variety of partial differential equations, not just mechanical problems. It can even be used to solve CFD problems, although they are more prone to be solved using the finite volumes method. So enumerating FEA and CFD in the same level is a conceptual mistake that has (sadly) diffused through the community and is now a common usage.
  2. We even discussed up to some extend in private emails the subject of this post.
  3. Every software-based random number generator is deterministic, although the seed can have a lot of entropy. This one, however is based on nuclear physics (again) and gives true random numbers.
  4. Back when I was a student I was studying chaotic natural convection loops and one of the teachers in charge of an optional subject (not an engineer) asked if I had performed “experiments.” I said “yes, I have built an actual loop.” And she replied “oh, but I mean with the computer”—implying that for her, performing an experiment meant numerically solving a set of differential equations.
  5. This time, the word experiment is correctly employed, as it does not refer to “solving equations” but to performing an actual experiment, namely to evaluate the impact of shifting HPC to cloud-based infrastructures.

Jeremy Theler on June 20th 2017

Founder & CEO of Seamplex

Source: Seamplex’ Blog

The content is licensed under the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/.

Administration of the project

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.