scholarly journals Monte Carlo techniques for time-dependent radiative transfer in 3-D supernovae

2004 ◽  
Vol 429 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. B. Lucy
2018 ◽  
Vol 620 ◽  
pp. A156 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Ergon ◽  
C. Fransson ◽  
A. Jerkstrand ◽  
C. Kozma ◽  
M. Kromer ◽  
...  

We present JEKYLL, a new code for modelling of supernova (SN) spectra and lightcurves based on Monte-Carlo (MC) techniques for the radiative transfer. The code assumes spherical symmetry, homologous expansion and steady state for the matter, but is otherwise capable of solving the time-dependent radiative transfer problem in non-local-thermodynamic-equilibrium (NLTE). The method used was introduced in a series of papers by Lucy, but the full time-dependent NLTE capabilities of it have never been tested. Here, we have extended the method to include non-thermal excitation and ionization as well as charge-transfer and two-photon processes. Based on earlier work, the non-thermal rates are calculated by solving the Spencer-Fano equation. Using a method previously developed for the SUMO code, macroscopic mixing of the material is taken into account in a statistical sense. To save computational power a diffusion solver is used in the inner region, where the radiation field may be assumed to be thermalized. In addition, a statistical Markov-chain model is used to sample the emission frequency more efficiently, and we introduce a method to control the sampling of the radiation field, which is used to reduce the noise in the radiation field estimators. Except for a description of JEKYLL, we provide comparisons with the ARTIS, SUMO and CMFGEN codes, which show good agreement in the calculated spectra as well as the state of the gas. In particular, the comparison with CMFGEN, which is similar in terms of physics but uses a different technique, shows that the Lucy method does indeed converge in the time-dependent NLTE case. Finally, as an example of the time-dependent NLTE capabilities of JEKYLL, we present a model of a Type IIb SN, taken from a set of models presented and discussed in detail in an accompanying paper. Based on this model we investigate the effects of NLTE, in particular those arising from non-thermal excitation and ionization, and find strong effects even on the bolometric lightcurve. This highlights the need for full NLTE calculations when simulating the spectra and lightcurves of SNe.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiang Cheng ◽  
Huai-Chun Zhou ◽  
Zhi-Feng Huang ◽  
Yong-Lin Yu ◽  
De-Xiu Huang

A time-dependent distribution of ratios of energy scattered by the medium or reflected by the boundary surfaces (DRESOR) method was proposed to solve the transient radiative transfer in a one-dimensional slab. This slab is filled with an absorbing, scattering, and nonemitting medium and exposed to a collimated, incident serial pulse with different pulse shapes and pulse widths. The time-dependent DRESOR values, representing the temporal response of an instantaneous, incident pulse with unit energy and the same incident direction as that for the serial pulse, were proposed and calculated by the Monte Carlo method. The temporal radiative intensity inside the medium with high directional resolution can be obtained from the time-dependent DRESOR values. The transient incident radiation results obtained by the DRESOR method were compared to those obtained with the Monte Carlo method, and good agreements were achieved. Influences of the pulse shape and width, reflectivity of the boundary, scattering albedo, optical thickness, and anisotropic scattering on the transient radiative transfer, especially the temporal response along different directions, were investigated.


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