I was just wondering if the air went over where the headlights are that smooth.
It really depends on the CFD program and how fine you mesh the model as to how fine your results and flow visualization. The finer the mesh the longer it will take to model and compute. As Rocket123 said, CFD can cost up to $37,000 for a 1 year license and you still have to spend a heap of money on a computer that is capable to run the CFD software. Plus a PhD. to run the program because it can be very complex to model and analyze.
To answer your question better, I would expect more separation off the rear and a wake that you don't see in that particular CFD model. Here is CFD for a stock car and you can notice the huge wake and turbulent air off the back and a high pressure off the front where the air on the ground ahead of the car is affected. A car without a spoiler would not be as pronounced on the rear, but would not be as smooth as the previous CFD model I posted. I will also post several CFD models that have finer meshing and illustrate how complex the flow can become in some models.


