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Goals and Topics

CWE2010 seeks to facilitate the exchange of the latest scientific and technical information in the field of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), particularly in its application to wind engineering.

CWE2010 will provide a platform for discussing and exchanging the latest information associated with the application of CFD to wind engineering problems and the tremendous advances in CFD technology in the past several years. The International Association for Wind Engineering (IAWE) co-convenes the Computational Wind Engineering (CWE) conference every four years in rotation with one of its three global regional organizations. The American Association for Wind Engineering (AAWE) will co-convene the 2010 event.

There are many emerging issues to be solved, not only in wind hazard mitigation, but also in air contamination problems near and in the far field of buildings, and in natural/cross ventilation or wind energy phenomena to preserve natural resources and to realize a sustainable society. CFD is one of the promising technologies for investigating these important issues, which will not necessarily be solved by traditional wind tunnel technology. CWE does not necessarily mean CFD, but can include various techniques using computers. Consideration is being given to all major wind engineering topics.

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Important Dates

Abstracts Due (300-500 words)
October 17, 2009
Notification of Acceptance December 2009
Presenter Papers Due
March 10, 2010


 
Online Registration Opened in Early January  
CWE2010 Early Registration Due March 1, 2010
Residence Hall Housing Registration Due March 1, 2010
Online Registration Closes
May 21, 2010
Register Today!!  


 
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Topics of interest - applications for homeland and societal security including natural and human-caused hazards and disasters, integration of
multiscale CWE models with endpoints for human health, fire damage, and property effects, CFD model development and validation, disaster preparedness
for wind damage, fire damage, and environmental contamination and their use in developing wind energy systems and their optimum siting.