Aerodynamic simulation of the surface pressure field around objects is crucial for many engineering problems. In recent years, deep neural networks have emerged as an efficient alternative to traditional, computationally expensive CFD simulations for modeling surface pressure fields. However, data scarcity remains a fundamental challenge, limiting the application of neural networks. To address this limitation, we propose to integrate aerodynamic data from multiple subfields and conduct joint training to learn more general field representations. We consolidate five different datasets covering various fields, including automobiles, trains, aircraft, and general shapes. Facing significant data differences across different domains, we propose UniField, which employs a domain-agnostic Transformer module to extract general point cloud features and customizes domain-specific flow-conditioned adapters to adapt to the flow information in different subfields. Despite the fact that aerodynamic data from different subfields are typically governed by different equations, we compare models trained jointly on all data with those trained separately on individual datasets and find that the jointly-trained model commonly demonstrates better performance. This indicates that these data complement each other to help the model learn better flow field representations. These results highlight the potential of UniField as a universal flow field representation model and lay the foundation for broader applications of neural networks in aerodynamic analysis.
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