4 research outputs found
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
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