
The color table was designed for people with color vision deficiency, optimized for those with red-green color blindness, but useful for everyone when showing scalar values. It’s called Cividis and was created by Ryan Renslow, Chris Anderton, and Jamie Nuñez of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. This could become the most used feature of the 5.3a release (learn more about it on the COMSOL Desktop® page in the Release Highlights).ĭemonstrating the copy-paste functionality.Ī new color table has been added that may be the most interesting new feature. For example, when working on a model that has multiple components running similar but varied analyses, instead of redefining several of the same physics boundary conditions over again, you can copy your already defined physics interface into a different component and make slight changes.


The copy-paste functionality has been extended to physics interfaces and even entire model components. Read on for a brief introduction to some of the significant updates to the COMSOL Multiphysics® and COMSOL Server™ platform products and add-on modules.ĬOMSOL Multiphysics® and COMSOL Server™ Version 5.3a Updatesīefore getting into the physics-specific updates, let’s take a look at a couple of the features that can be employed by every COMSOL Multiphysics user. Today marks the release of a new version of the COMSOL® software, which includes core functionality updates and major updates to the add-on modules.
