853 research outputs found
Surface detonation in type Ia supernova explosions?
We explore the evolution of thermonuclear supernova explosions when the
progenitor white dwarf star ignites asymmetrically off-center. Several
numerical simulations are carried out in two and three dimensions to test the
consequences of different initial flame configurations such as spherical
bubbles displaced from the center, more complex deformed configurations, and
teardrop-shaped ignitions. The burning bubbles float towards the surface while
releasing energy due to the nuclear reactions. If the energy release is too
small to gravitationally unbind the star, the ash sweeps around it, once the
burning bubble approaches the surface. Collisions in the fuel on the opposite
side increase its temperature and density and may -- in some cases -- initiate
a detonation wave which will then propagate inward burning the core of the star
and leading to a strong explosion. However, for initial setups in two
dimensions that seem realistic from pre-ignition evolution, as well as for all
three-dimensional simulations the collimation of the surface material is found
to be too weak to trigger a detonation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, in: Proceedings of the SciDAC 2006 Meeting,
Denver June 25-26 2006, also available at
http://herald.iop.org/jpcs46/m51/gbr//link/40
Scientific investigations in the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea during the 1974-1975 Calypso cruise, parts 1 and 2
The distribution and concentrations of the standing crop of phytoplankton and nutrient salts in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea were investigated to provide ground truth for correlating temperature and chlorophyll-a measurements with observations from NASA U-2 aircraft equipped with specially designed sensors for measuring ocean color phenomena. The physical, chemical, and biological data obtained is summarized. Sampling procedures and methods used for determining plant pigments, species composition of phytoplankton, nutrient salt analysis, and the euphotic zones are described
Algunos tipos de Malváceas descriptos por C. B.Presl
La oportunidad de examinar ciertos tipos de nombres publicados por C.B. Presl en el género Malva, ha llevado a una comprensión más clara de cuatro especies y la necesidad de hacer una nueva combinación: Urocarpidium echinatum (C. Presl) Krapov. & Fryxell
Simulations of Astrophysical Fluid Instabilities
We present direct numerical simulations of mixing at Rayleigh-Taylor unstable
interfaces performed with the FLASH code, developed at the ASCI/Alliances
Center for Astrophysical Thermonuclear Flashes at the University of Chicago. We
present initial results of single-mode studies in two and three dimensions. Our
results indicate that three-dimensional instabilities grow significantly faster
than two-dimensional instabilities and that grid resolution can have a
significant effect on instability growth rates. We also find that unphysical
diffusive mixing occurs at the fluid interface, particularly in poorly resolved
simulations.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure. To appear in the proceedings of the 20th Texas
Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysic
Rings of Dark Matter in Collisions Between Clusters of Galaxies
Several lines of evidence suggest that the galaxy cluster Cl0024+17, an
apparently relaxed system, is actually a collision of two clusters, the
interaction occurring along our line of sight. Recent lensing observations
suggest the presence of a ring-like dark matter structure, which has been
interpreted as the result of such a collision. In this paper we present
-body simulations of cluster collisions along the line of sight to
investigate the detectability of such features. We use realistic dark matter
density profiles as determined from cosmological simulations. Our simulations
show a "shoulder" in the dark matter distribution after the collision, but no
ring feature even when the initial particle velocity distribution is highly
tangentially anisotropic (). Only when the initial
particle velocity distribution is circular do our simulations show such a
feature. Even modestly anisotropic velocity distributions are inconsistent with
the halo velocity distributions seen in cosmological simulations, and would
require highly fine-tuned initial conditions. Our investigation leaves us
without an explanation for the dark matter ring-like feature in Cl 0024+17
suggested by lensing observations.Comment: 7 pages (emulateapj), 9 figures. Expanded figures and text to match
accepted versio
Optimisation of patch distribution strategies for AMR applications
As core counts increase in the world's most powerful supercomputers, applications are becoming limited not only by computational power, but also by data availability. In the race to exascale, efficient and effective communication policies are key to achieving optimal application performance. Applications using adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) trade off communication for computational load balancing, to enable the focused computation of specific areas of interest. This class of application is particularly susceptible to the communication performance of the underlying architectures, and are inherently difficult to scale efficiently. In this paper we present a study of the effect of patch distribution strategies on the scalability of an AMR code. We demonstrate the significance of patch placement on communication overheads, and by balancing the computation and communication costs of patches, we develop a scheme to optimise performance of a specific, industry-strength, benchmark application
Large-Scale Simulations of Clusters of Galaxies
We discuss some of the computational challenges encountered in simulating the
evolution of clusters of galaxies. Eulerian adaptive mesh refinement (AMR)
techniques can successfully address these challenges but are currently being
used by only a few groups. We describe our publicly available AMR code, FLASH,
which uses an object-oriented framework to manage its AMR library, physics
modules, and automated verification. We outline the development of the FLASH
framework to include collisionless particles, permitting it to be used for
cluster simulation.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Proceedings of the VII International
Workshop on Advanced Computing and Analysis Techniques in Physics Research
(ACAT 2000), Fermilab, Oct. 16-20, 200
AZEuS: An Adaptive Zone Eulerian Scheme for Computational MHD
A new adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) version of the ZEUS-3D astrophysical
magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) fluid code, AZEuS, is described. The AMR module in
AZEuS has been completely adapted to the staggered mesh that characterises the
ZEUS family of codes, on which scalar quantities are zone-centred and vector
components are face-centred. In addition, for applications using static grids,
it is necessary to use higher-order interpolations for prolongation to minimise
the errors caused by waves crossing from a grid of one resolution to another.
Finally, solutions to test problems in 1-, 2-, and 3-dimensions in both
Cartesian and spherical coordinates are presented.Comment: 52 pages, 17 figures; Accepted for publication in ApJ
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