382 research outputs found
A Moving Frame Algorithm for High Mach Number Hydrodynamics
We present a new approach to Eulerian computational fluid dynamics that is
designed to work at high Mach numbers encountered in astrophysical hydrodynamic
simulations. The Eulerian fluid conservation equations are solved in an
adaptive frame moving with the fluid where Mach numbers are minimized. The
moving frame approach uses a velocity decomposition technique to define local
kinetic variables while storing the bulk kinetic components in a smoothed
background velocity field that is associated with the grid velocity.
Gravitationally induced accelerations are added to the grid, thereby minimizing
the spurious heating problem encountered in cold gas flows. Separately tracking
local and bulk flow components allows thermodynamic variables to be accurately
calculated in both subsonic and supersonic regions. A main feature of the
algorithm, that is not possible in previous Eulerian implementations, is the
ability to resolve shocks and prevent spurious heating where both the preshock
and postshock Mach numbers are high. The hybrid algorithm combines the high
resolution shock capturing ability of the second-order accurate Eulerian TVD
scheme with a low-diffusion Lagrangian advection scheme. We have implemented a
cosmological code where the hydrodynamic evolution of the baryons is captured
using the moving frame algorithm while the gravitational evolution of the
collisionless dark matter is tracked using a particle-mesh N-body algorithm.
The MACH code is highly suited for simulating the evolution of the IGM where
accurate thermodynamic evolution is needed for studies of the Lyman alpha
forest, the Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect, and the X-ray background. Hydrodynamic
and cosmological tests are described and results presented. The current code is
fast, memory-friendly, and parallelized for shared-memory machines.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Pulsar scintillations from corrugated reconnection sheets in the ISM
We show that surface waves along interstellar current sheets closely aligned
with the line of sight lead to pulsar scintillation properties consistent with
those observed. This mechanism naturally produces the length and density scales
of the ISM scattering lenses that are required to explain the magnitude and
dynamical spectrum of the scintillations. In this picture, the parts of warm
ionized interstellar medium that are responsible for the scintillations are
relatively quiescent, with scintillation and scattering resulting from weak
waves propagating along magnetic domain boundary current sheets, which are both
expected from helicity conservation and have been observed in numerical
simulations. The model statistically predicts the spacing and amplitudes of
inverted parabolic arcs seen in Fourier-transformed dynamical spectra of
strongly scintillating pulsars with only 3 parameters. Multi-frequency,
multi-epoch low frequency VLBI observations can quantitatively test this
picture. If successful, in addition to mapping the ISM, this may open the door
to precise nanoarcsecond pulsar astrometry, distance measurements, and emission
studies using these 10AU interferometers in the sky.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, accepted in MNRA
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