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MultiPhysicsVault/wiki/concepts/Engineering Mathematical Models.md
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---
type: concept
title: "Engineering Mathematical Models"
complexity: intermediate
domain: computational-mechanics
aliases:
- engineering model idealization
- mathematical modeling
created: 2026-05-28
updated: 2026-05-28
address: c-000007
tags:
- concept
- modeling
- finite-element-method
status: current
related:
- "[[Finite Element Method]]"
- "[[Computational Mechanics]]"
sources:
- "[[Finite Element Procedures]]"
source_refs:
- source: "[[Finite Element Procedures]]"
raw_path: ".raw/FiniteElementProcedures/"
raw_files:
- "FiniteElementProcedures_003.md"
- "FiniteElementProcedures_002.md"
- "FiniteElementProcedures_010.md"
- "FiniteElementProcedures_104.md"
md_indices:
- 3
- 2
- 10
- 104
match: "heuristic-heading-keyword"
confidence: high
---
# Engineering Mathematical Models
## Definition
Engineering mathematical models are idealized descriptions of physical systems, including geometry, material behavior, loads, boundary conditions, constraints, and the governing equations selected for analysis.
## How It Works
The analyst chooses a model that is simple enough to solve and rich enough to answer the engineering question. A finite element solution then approximates that selected model. If the model is poorly chosen, a numerically accurate result can still be physically misleading.
## Why It Matters
The source positions finite element analysis as part of an iterative engineering process: define the model, solve it, assess the result, compare against expected physical behavior, and refine the model when needed.
## Connections
- [[Finite Element Method]] solves mathematical models after discretization.
- [[Mixed Finite Element Formulations]] and [[Nonlinear Finite Element Analysis]] are needed when the chosen model includes constraints, incompressibility, contact, or nonlinear material response.
## Sources
- [[Finite Element Procedures]]