10 research outputs found
Cosmological black holes and the direction of time
Macroscopic irreversible processes emerge from fundamental physical laws of
reversible character. The source of the local irreversibility seems to be not
in the laws themselves but in the initial and boundary conditions of the
equations that represent the laws. In this work we propose that the screening
of currents by black hole event horizons determines, locally, a preferred
direction for the flux of electromagnetic energy. We study the growth of black
hole event horizons due to the cosmological expansion and accretion of cosmic
microwave background radiation, for different cosmological models. We propose
generalized McVittie co-moving metrics and integrate the rate of accretion of
cosmic microwave background radiation onto a supermassive black hole over
cosmic time. We find that for flat, open, and closed Friedmann cosmological
models, the ratio of the total area of the black hole event horizons with
respect to the area of a radial co-moving space-like hypersurface always
increases. Since accretion of cosmic radiation sets an absolute lower limit to
the total matter accreted by black holes, this implies that the causal past and
future are not mirror symmetric for any spacetime event. The asymmetry causes a
net Poynting flux in the global future direction; the latter is in turn related
to the ever increasing thermodynamic entropy. Thus, we expose a connection
between four different "time arrows": cosmological, electromagnetic,
gravitational, and thermodynamic.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures in Foundations of Science (2017
Interpretation Misunderstandings about Elementary Quantum Mechanics
Quantum Mechanics is a fundamental physical theory about atomic-scale processes. It was built between 1920 and 1940 by the most distinguished physicists of that time. The accordance between the predictions of the theory and experimental results is remarkable. The physical interpretation of its mathematical constructs, however, raised unprecedented controversies. Ontological, semantic, and epistemic vagueness abound in the orthodox interpretations and have resulted in serious misunderstandings that are often repeated in textbooks and elsewhere. In this work, we identify, criticize, and clarify the most spread ones
Ameliorating the Courant-Friedrichs-Lewy condition in spherical coordinates: A double FFT filter method for general relativistic MHD in dynamical spacetimes
Numerical simulations of merging compact objects and their remnants form the
theoretical foundation for gravitational wave and multi-messenger astronomy.
While Cartesian-coordinate-based adaptive mesh refinement is commonly used for
simulations, spherical-like coordinates are more suitable for nearly spherical
remnants and azimuthal flows due to lower numerical dissipation in the
evolution of fluid angular momentum, as well as requiring fewer numbers of
computational cells. However, the use of spherical coordinates to numerically
solve hyperbolic partial differential equations can result in severe
Courant-Friedrichs-Lewy (CFL) stability condition timestep limitations, which
can make simulations prohibitively expensive. This paper addresses this issue
for the numerical solution of coupled spacetime and general relativistic
magnetohydrodynamics evolutions by introducing a double FFT filter and
implementing it within the fully MPI-parallelized SphericalNR framework in the
Einstein Toolkit. We demonstrate the effectiveness and robustness of the
filtering algorithm by applying it to a number of challenging code tests, and
show that it passes these tests effectively, demonstrating convergence while
also increasing the
timestep significantly compared to unfiltered simulations.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, revtex4-
Addition of tabulated equation of state and neutrino leakage support to IllinoisGRMHD
We have added support for realistic, microphysical, finite-temperature
equations of state (EOS) and neutrino physics via a leakage scheme to
IllinoisGRMHD, an open-source GRMHD code for dynamical spacetimes in the
Einstein Toolkit. These new features are provided by two new, NRPy+-based
codes: NRPyEOS, which performs highly efficient EOS table lookups and
interpolations, and NRPyLeakage, which implements a new, AMR-capable neutrino
leakage scheme in the Einstein Toolkit. We have performed a series of strenuous
validation tests that demonstrate the robustness of these new codes,
particularly on the Cartesian AMR grids provided by Carpet. Furthermore, we
show results from fully dynamical GRMHD simulations of single unmagnetized
neutron stars, and magnetized binary neutron star mergers. This new version of
IllinoisGRMHD, as well as NRPyEOS and NRPyLeakage, is pedagogically documented
in Jupyter notebooks and fully open source. The codes will be proposed for
inclusion in an upcoming version of the Einstein Toolkit.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures. v2 matches PRD versio
Handing off the outcome of binary neutron star mergers for accurate and long-term post-merger simulations
We perform binary neutron star (BNS) merger simulations in full dynamical
general relativity with IllinoisGRMHD, on a Cartesian grid with adaptive-mesh
refinement. After the remnant black hole has become nearly stationary, the
evolution of the surrounding accretion disk on Cartesian grids over long
timescales (1s) is suboptimal, as Cartesian coordinates over-resolve the
angular coordinates at large distances, and the accreting plasma flows
obliquely across coordinate lines dissipating angular momentum artificially
from the disk. To address this, we present the Handoff, a set of computational
tools that enables the transfer of general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic
(GRMHD) and spacetime data from IllinoisGRMHD to HARM3D, a GRMHD code that
specializes in modeling black hole accretion disks in static spacetimes over
long timescales, making use of general coordinate systems with spherical
topology. We demonstrate that the Handoff allows for a smooth and reliable
transition of GRMHD fields and spacetime data, enabling us to efficiently and
reliably evolve BNS dynamics well beyond merger. We also discuss future plans,
which involve incorporating advanced equations of state and neutrino physics
into BNS simulations using the \handoff approach
Minidisk Accretion onto Spinning Black Hole Binaries: Quasi-periodicities and Outflows
Abstract
We perform a full 3D general relativistic magnetohydrodynamical (GRMHD) simulation of an equal-mass, spinning, binary black hole approaching merger, surrounded by a circumbinary disk and with a minidisk around each black hole. For this purpose, we evolve the ideal GRMHD equations on top of an approximated spacetime for the binary that is valid in every position of space, including the black hole horizons, during the inspiral regime. We use relaxed initial data for the circumbinary disk from a previous long-term simulation, where the accretion is dominated by a m = 1 overdensity called the lump. We compare our new spinning simulation with a previous non-spinning run, studying how spin influences the minidisk properties. We analyze the accretion from the inner edge of the lump to the black hole, focusing on the angular momentum budget of the fluid around the minidisks. We find that minidisks in the spinning case have more mass over a cycle than the non-spinning case. However, in both cases we find that most of the mass received by the black holes is delivered by the direct plunging of material from the lump. We also analyze the morphology and variability of the electromagnetic fluxes, and we find they share the same periodicities of the accretion rate. In the spinning case, we find that the outflows are stronger than the non-spinning case. Our results will be useful to understand and produce realistic synthetic light curves and spectra, which can be used in future observations.</jats:p
HARM3D+NUC:A New Method for Simulating the Post-merger Phase of Binary Neutron Star Mergers with GRMHD, Tabulated EOS, and Neutrino Leakage
The first binary neutron star merger has already been detected in
gravitational waves. The signal was accompanied by an electromagnetic
counterpart including a kilonova component powered by the decay of radioactive
nuclei, as well as a short -ray burst. In order to understand the
radioactively-powered signal, it is necessary to simulate the outflows and
their nucleosynthesis from the post-merger disk. Simulating the disk and
predicting the composition of the outflows requires general relativistic
magnetohydrodynamical (GRMHD) simulations that include a realistic,
finite-temperature equation of state (EOS) and self-consistently calculating
the impact of neutrinos. In this work, we detail the implementation of a
finite-temperature EOS and the treatment of neutrinos in the GRMHD code
HARM3D+NUC, based on HARM3D. We include formal tests of both the
finite-temperature EOS and the neutrino leakage scheme. We further test the
code by showing that, given conditions similar to those of published remnant
disks following neutron star mergers, it reproduces both recombination of free
nucleons to a neutron-rich composition and excitation of a thermal wind.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, published in Ap