207 research outputs found
Star Formation with Adaptive Mesh Refinement Radiation Hydrodynamics
I provide a pedagogic review of adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) radiation
hydrodynamics (RHD) methods and codes used in simulations of star formation, at
a level suitable for researchers who are not computational experts. I begin
with a brief overview of the types of RHD processes that are most important to
star formation, and then I formally introduce the equations of RHD and the
approximations one uses to render them computationally tractable. I discuss
strategies for solving these approximate equations on adaptive grids, with
particular emphasis on identifying the main advantages and disadvantages of
various approximations and numerical approaches. Finally, I conclude by
discussing areas ripe for improvement.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in the Proceedings of IAU Symposium 270:
Computational Star Formatio
A Work Program for Equity Planners
During the mid-twentieth century period of Title I urban renewal, planners operated in a field that featured big plans and bold projects. Urban renewal was an approach in which well-meaning people set out to clean up our messy cities and many of the people who lived in them through large-scale projects. This approach was supported by law and a general consensus that the demolition of substandard housing was a good thing. But, like the rest of us, poor people need housing too, and bitter struggles over urban renewal displacements forced politicians to end the program in 1974. Today, few planners are involved in planning for giant projects. Unlike architects who see the city as a world of built forms, or developers who rarely see the city at all but see only packages of potential profit, most planners see a more comprehensive picture. The way planners see their cities is important, because of their power to influence land use decisions and because their code of ethics directs them to expand choice and opportunity for all persons, recognizing a special responsibility to plan for the needs of disadvantaged populations (AICP, 2010)
From Planning Practice to Academia
By tracing his journey from city planning director to director of a technical assistance center within a large university, Norman Krumholz explores the importance of bridging the gap between the study and practice of planning. In so doing, he states that each of these very different worlds has a great deal to gain from the other
The Power Spectrum of Turbulence in NGC 1333: Outflows or Large-Scale Driving?
Is the turbulence in cluster-forming regions internally driven by stellar
outflows or the consequence of a large-scale turbulent cascade? We address this
question by studying the turbulent energy spectrum in NGC 1333. Using synthetic
13CO maps computed with a snapshot of a supersonic turbulence simulation, we
show that the VCS method of Lazarian and Pogosyan provides an accurate estimate
of the turbulent energy spectrum. We then apply this method to the 13CO map of
NGC 1333 from the COMPLETE database. We find the turbulent energy spectrum is a
power law, E(k) k^-beta, in the range of scales 0.06 pc < ell < 1.5 pc, with
slope beta=1.85\pm 0.04. The estimated energy injection scale of stellar
outflows in NGC 1333 is ell_inj 0.3 pc, well resolved by the observations.
There is no evidence of the flattening of the energy spectrum above the scale
ell_inj predicted by outflow-driven simulations and analytical models. The
power spectrum of integrated intensity is also a nearly perfect power law in
the range of scales 0.16 pc < ell < 7.9 pc, with no feature above ell_inj. We
conclude that the observed turbulence in NGC 1333 does not appear to be driven
primarily by stellar outflows.Comment: Submitted to APJ Letters on September 22, 2009 - Accepted on November
18, 200
Global star formation revisited
A general treatment of disk star formation is developed from a dissipative
multi-phase model, with the dominant dissipation due to cloud collisions. The
Schmidt-Kennicutt law emerges naturally for star-forming disks and starbursts.
We predict that there should be an inverse correlation between Tully-Fisher law
and Schmidt-Kennicutt law residuals. The model is extended to include a
multi-phase treatment of supernova feedback that leads to a turbulent
pressure-regulated generalization of the star formation law and is applicable
to gas-rich starbursts. Enhanced pressure, as expected in merger-induced star
formation, enhances star formation efficiency. An upper limit is derived for
the disk star formation rate in starbursts that depends on the ratio of global
ISM to cloud pressures. We extend these considerations to the case where the
interstellar gas pressure in the inner galaxy is dominated by outflows from a
central AGN. During massive spheroid formation, AGN-driven winds trigger star
formation, resulting in enhanced supernova feedback and outflows. The outflows
are comparable to the AGN-boosted star formation rate and saturate in the
super-Eddington limit. Downsizing of both SMBH and spheroids is a consequence
of AGN-driven positive feedback. Bondi accretion feeds the central black hole
with a specific accretion rate that is proportional to the black hole mass.
AGN-enhanced star formation is mediated by turbulent pressure and relates
spheroid star formation rate to black hole accretion rate. The relation between
black hole mass and spheroid velocity dispersion has a coefficient (Salpeter
time to gas consumption time ratio) that provides an arrow of time. Highly
efficient, AGN-boosted star formation can occur at high redshift.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, in press (references added
The Structure of the Interstellar Medium of Star Forming Galaxies
We present numerical methods for including stellar feedback in galaxy-scale
simulations. We include heating by SNe (I & II), gas recycling and
shock-heating from O-star & AGB winds, HII photoionization, and radiation
pressure from stellar photons. The energetics and time-dependence are taken
directly from stellar evolution models. We implement these in simulations with
pc-scale resolution, modeling galaxies from SMC-like dwarfs and MW analogues to
massive z~2 starburst disks. Absent feedback, gas cools and collapses without
limit. With feedback, the ISM reaches a multi-phase steady state in which GMCs
continuously form, disperse, and re-form. Our primary results include: (1) Star
forming galaxies generically self-regulate at Toomre Q~1. Most of the volume is
in diffuse hot gas with most of the mass in dense GMC complexes. The phase
structure and gas mass at high densities are much more sensitive probes of
stellar feedback physics than integrated quantities (Toomre Q or gas velocity
dispersion). (2) Different feedback mechanisms act on different scales:
radiation & HII pressure are critical to prevent runaway collapse of dense gas
in GMCs. SNe and stellar winds dominate the dynamics of volume-filling hot gas;
however this primarily vents out of the disk. (3) The galaxy-averaged SFR is
determined by feedback. For given feedback efficiency, restricting star
formation to molecular gas or modifying the cooling function has little effect;
but changing feedback mechanisms directly translates to shifts off the
Kennicutt-Schmidt relation. (4) Self-gravity leads to marginally-bound GMCs
with an ~M^-2 mass function with a cutoff at the Jeans mass; they live a few
dynamical times before being disrupted by stellar feedback and turn ~1-10% of
their mass into stars (increasing from dwarfs through starburst galaxies).
Low-mass GMCs are preferentially unbound.Comment: 34 pages, 24 figures, accepted to MNRAS (matches accepted version).
Movies of the simulations are available at
https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~phopkins/Site/Movies_sbw.htm
Comparing Numerical Methods for Isothermal Magnetized Supersonic Turbulence
We employ simulations of supersonic super-Alfvenic turbulence decay as a
benchmark test problem to assess and compare the performance of nine
astrophysical MHD methods actively used to model star formation. The set of
nine codes includes: ENZO, FLASH, KT-MHD, LL-MHD, PLUTO, PPML, RAMSES, STAGGER,
and ZEUS. We present a comprehensive set of statistical measures designed to
quantify the effects of numerical dissipation in these MHD solvers. We compare
power spectra for basic fields to determine the effective spectral bandwidth of
the methods and rank them based on their relative effective Reynolds numbers.
We also compare numerical dissipation for solenoidal and dilatational velocity
components to check for possible impacts of the numerics on small-scale density
statistics. Finally, we discuss convergence of various characteristics for the
turbulence decay test and impacts of various components of numerical schemes on
the accuracy of solutions. We show that the best performing codes employ a
consistently high order of accuracy for spatial reconstruction of the evolved
fields, transverse gradient interpolation, conservation law update step, and
Lorentz force computation. The best results are achieved with divergence-free
evolution of the magnetic field using the constrained transport method, and
using little to no explicit artificial viscosity. Codes which fall short in one
or more of these areas are still useful, but they must compensate higher
numerical dissipation with higher numerical resolution. This paper is the
largest, most comprehensive MHD code comparison on an application-like test
problem to date. We hope this work will help developers improve their numerical
algorithms while helping users to make informed choices in picking optimal
applications for their specific astrophysical problems.Comment: 17 pages, 5 color figures, revised version to appear in ApJ, 735,
July 201
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