FELiCS has gone open source in end of 2025. Happy New Year 2026.
2025 was a great year for the FELiCS project. After nearly seven years of development, the software is now available as […]
2025 was a great year for the FELiCS project. After nearly seven years of development, the software is now available as […]
In this study, we use physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) to assimilate the turbulent mean flow fields from Cartesian time-resolved three-dimensional
In a recent publication titled Low-frequency streaky structures in turbulent hydrogen jet flames, FELiCS was used to reveal the mechanisms driving dominant heat-release
Earlier this year our team packed up and headed to Lehnin, just outside Berlin, for three days of working (and living)
In this project, we leverage the compressible capabilities of FELiCS to predict trailing edge noise in wind turbines. Our primary
The aerodynamic sound generated by the oblique collision of two vortex rings is featured by the asymmetric emission associated with
In a recent JFM article titled On the role of eddy viscosity in resolvent analysis of turbulent jets, FELiCS is used to quantify
Currently, Kilian, Thomas, Jens, and Moritz are participating in the Summer Program at Stanford University’s Center for Turbulence Research (CTR),
Last week, Simon, Thomas, Jakob, and Kilian joined the ERCOFTAC SIG 39 Conference in Rome, focused on Coherent Structures in
Reflecting the growing interest in linear analysis within the combustion research community, this year’s Symposium on Numerical Combustion in Kyoto,