scholarly journals Key elements of robustness in binary black hole evolutions using spectral methods

2014 ◽  
Vol 23 (07) ◽  
pp. 1430014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Béla Szilágyi

As a network of advanced-era gravitational wave detectors is nearing its design sensitivity, efficient and accurate waveform modeling becomes more and more relevant. Understanding of the nature of the signal being sought can have an order unity effect on the event rates seen in these instruments. The paper provides a description of key elements of the Spectral Einstein Code (SpEC), with details of our spectral adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) algorithm that has been optimized for binary black hole (BBH) evolutions. We expect that the gravitational waveform catalog produced by our code will have a central importance in both the detection and parameter estimation of gravitational waves in these instruments.

2000 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 435-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Diener ◽  
Nina Jansen ◽  
Alexei Khokhlov ◽  
Igor Novikov

2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S267) ◽  
pp. 333-333
Author(s):  
Robyn Levine ◽  
Nickolay Y. Gnedin ◽  
Andrew J. S. Hamilton

Using a hydrodynamic adaptive mesh refinement code, we simulate the growth and evolution of a typical disk galaxy hosting a supermassive black hole (SMBH) within a cosmological volume. The simulation covers a dynamical range of 10 million, which allows us to study the transport of matter and angular momentum from super-galactic scales down to the outer edge of the accretion disk around the SMBH. A dynamically interesting circumnuclear disk develops in the central few hundred parsecs of the simulated galaxy, through which gas is stochastically transported to the central black hole.


2019 ◽  
Vol 629 ◽  
pp. A61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hector Olivares ◽  
Oliver Porth ◽  
Jordy Davelaar ◽  
Elias R. Most ◽  
Christian M. Fromm ◽  
...  

Context. Worldwide very long baseline radio interferometry (VLBI) arrays are expected to obtain horizon-scale images of supermassive black hole candidates and of relativistic jets in several nearby active galactic nuclei. This, together with the expected detection of electromagnetic counterparts of gravitational-wave signals, motivates the development of models for magnetohydrodynamic flows in strong gravitational fields. Aims. The Black Hole Accretion Code (BHAC) is a publicliy available code intended to aid with the modeling of such sources by performing general relativistic magnetohydrodynamical simulations in arbitrary stationary spacetimes. New additions to the code are required in order to guarantee an accurate evolution of the magnetic field when small and large scales are captured simultaneously. Methods. We discuss the adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) techniques employed in BHAC, which are essential to keep several problems computationally tractable, as well as staggered-mesh-based constrained transport (CT) algorithms to preserve the divergence-free constraint of the magnetic field. We also present a general class of prolongation operators for face-allocated variables compatible with them. Results. After presenting several standard tests for the new implementation, we show that the choice of the divergence-control method can produce qualitative differences in the simulation results for scientifically relevant accretion problems. We demonstrate the ability of AMR to decrease the computational costs of black hole accretion simulations while sufficiently resolving turbulence arising from the magnetorotational instability. In particular, we describe a simulation of an accreting Kerr black hole in Cartesian coordinates using AMR to follow the propagation of a relativistic jet while self-consistently including the jet engine, a problem set up for which the new AMR implementation is particularly advantageous. Conclusions. The CT methods and AMR strategies discussed here are currently being used in the simulations performed with BHAC for the generation of theoretical models for the Event Horizon Telescope collaboration.


2019 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
James Healy ◽  
Carlos O. Lousto ◽  
Jacob Lange ◽  
Richard O’Shaughnessy ◽  
Yosef Zlochower ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tyson B. Littenberg ◽  
John G. Baker ◽  
Alessandra Buonanno ◽  
Bernard J. Kelly

2017 ◽  
Vol 598 ◽  
pp. A38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zakaria Meliani ◽  
Yosuke Mizuno ◽  
Hector Olivares ◽  
Oliver Porth ◽  
Luciano Rezzolla ◽  
...  

Context. In many astrophysical phenomena, and especially in those that involve the high-energy regimes that always accompany the astronomical phenomenology of black holes and neutron stars, physical conditions that are achieved are extreme in terms of speeds, temperatures, and gravitational fields. In such relativistic regimes, numerical calculations are the only tool to accurately model the dynamics of the flows and the transport of radiation in the accreting matter. Aims. We here continue our effort of modelling the behaviour of matter when it orbits or is accreted onto a generic black hole by developing a new numerical code that employs advanced techniques geared towards solving the equations of general-relativistic hydrodynamics. Methods. More specifically, the new code employs a number of high-resolution shock-capturing Riemann solvers and reconstruction algorithms, exploiting the enhanced accuracy and the reduced computational cost of adaptive mesh-refinement (AMR) techniques. In addition, the code makes use of sophisticated ray-tracing libraries that, coupled with general-relativistic radiation-transfer calculations, allow us to accurately compute the electromagnetic emissions from such accretion flows. Results. We validate the new code by presenting an extensive series of stationary accretion flows either in spherical or axial symmetry that are performed either in two or three spatial dimensions. In addition, we consider the highly nonlinear scenario of a recoiling black hole produced in the merger of a supermassive black-hole binary interacting with the surrounding circumbinary disc. In this way, we can present for the first time ray-traced images of the shocked fluid and the light curve resulting from consistent general-relativistic radiation-transport calculations from this process. Conclusions. The work presented here lays the ground for the development of a generic computational infrastructure employing AMR techniques to accurately and self-consistently calculate general-relativistic accretion flows onto compact objects. In addition to the accurate handling of the matter, we provide a self-consistent electromagnetic emission from these scenarios by solving the associated radiative-transfer problem. While magnetic fields are currently excluded from our analysis, the tools presented here can have a number of applications to study accretion flows onto black holes or neutron stars.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document