Jeff Hiller
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
2 years ago
21 ott 2022, 09:18 GMT-4
Hello Pascal,
A/ I suppose you mean the tangent vector, right? The tangent vector to an edge in 3D has components t1x, t1y and t1z. See COMSOL Multiphysics Reference Manual, version 6.0, page 321 for more details.
B/ A surface has two independent tangential vectors, t1 and t2, with components t1x, etc. If you mean normal vector, then it's n and its components are nx, etc. See same reference as above for more details.
Best,
Jeff
-------------------
Jeff Hiller
Hello Pascal,
A/ I suppose you mean the tangent vector, right? The tangent vector to an edge in 3D has components t1x, t1y and t1z. See COMSOL Multiphysics Reference Manual, version 6.0, page 321 for more details.
B/ A surface has two independent tangential vectors, t1 and t2, with components t1x, etc. If you mean normal vector, then it's n and its components are nx, etc. See same reference as above for more details.
Best,
Jeff
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
2 years ago
21 ott 2022, 09:33 GMT-4
Hi Jeff,
thanks for your reply!
(Yes, I meant the normalized tangent vector, sorry for the confusion.)
That works well when I am evaluating at the specific line. Can I also use the line's direction vector elsewhere? In my example the line is edge 152 and I would like to evaluate the magnetic field in that direction at a point not on the edge. (I tried dom152.t1x but it doesn't work).
Cheers,
Pascal
Hi Jeff,
thanks for your reply!
(Yes, I meant the normalized tangent vector, sorry for the confusion.)
That works well when I am evaluating at the specific line. Can I also use the line's direction vector elsewhere? In my example the line is edge 152 and I would like to evaluate the magnetic field in that direction at a point not on the edge. (I tried dom152.t1x but it doesn't work).
Cheers,
Pascal
Jeff Hiller
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
2 years ago
21 ott 2022, 09:50 GMT-4
You can, but you will need to tell the software how to map from the line (edge 152) to the other locations where you want the data to be available (Since there isn't a unique, obvious, mapping the software can't do that on its own). That's a job for Nonlocal Couplings. See COMSOL Multiphysics Reference Manual, version 6.0, page 369 and following.
Jeff
-------------------
Jeff Hiller
You can, but you will need to tell the software how to map from the line (edge 152) to the other locations where you want the data to be available (Since there isn't a unique, obvious, mapping the software can't do that on its own). That's a job for Nonlocal Couplings. See COMSOL Multiphysics Reference Manual, version 6.0, page 369 and following.
Jeff