Lethe (pronounced /ˈliːθiː/) is an open-source computational fluid dynamics (CFD), discrete element method (DEM) and coupled CFD-DEM software which uses high-order continuous Galerkin formulations to simulate single and multiphase flows. Lethe contains a family of solvers that are based on deal.II, a finite element library. Through deal.II, Lethe uses Trilinos for its sparse linear algebra routines and p4est for its distributed adaptative quadtrees and octrees.
Lethe is named after the river of forgetfulness, which, according to Wikipedia,
is one of the five rivers of the Greek underworld[,] the other four [being] Acheron (the river of sorrow), Cocytus (the river of lamentation), Phlegethon (the river of fire) and Styx (the river that separates Earth and the Underworld). … The shades of the dead were required to drink the waters of the Lethe in order to forget their earthly life.
Lethe is described here. It originally began as a weekend project, but slowly grew into a CFD, DEM and CFD-DEM software used in actual research. Lethe is under active development.
Note: Lethe would not exist without the dedicated work of the deal.II authors. The authors of Lethe would like to emphasize that without deal.II, dedicated solvers like Lethe could not exist.
Documentation, tutorials, and more can be found here.
Developer documentation based on Doxygen can be found here
Follow the instructions in the documentation.
Main developer:
Contributors (in alphabetical order):
- Amishga Alphonius
- Antoine Avrit
- Lucka Barbeau
- Valérie Bibeau
- Bianca Bugeaud
- Audrey Collard-Daigneault
- Carole-Anne Daunais
- Toni El Geitani
- Olivier Gaboriault
- Simon Gauvin
- Shahab Golshan
- Olivier Guévremont
- Marion Hanne
- Jeanne Joachim
- Rajeshwari Kamble
- Martin Kronbichler
- Maxime Landry
- Pierre Laurentin
- Charles Le Pailleur
- Oreste Marquis
- Ghazaleh Mirakhori
- Thomas Monatte
- Peter Munch
- Victor Oliveira Ferreira
- Hélène Papillon-Laroche
- Paul Patience
- Laura Prieto Saavedra
- Catherine Radburn
- Philippe Rivest
- Mikael Vaillant
This project is licensed under the LGPL-2.1 license.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted by you for inclusion in this project shall be licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.