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Published February 2015 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

RICH: Open-source Hydrodynamic Simulation on a Moving Voronoi Mesh

Abstract

We present here RICH, a state-of-the-art two-dimensional hydrodynamic code based on Godunov's method, on an unstructured moving mesh (the acronym stands for Racah Institute Computational Hydrodynamics). This code is largely based on the code AREPO. It differs from AREPO in the interpolation and time-advancement schemeS as well as a novel parallelization scheme based on Voronoi tessellation. Using our code, we study the pros and cons of a moving mesh (in comparison to a static mesh). We also compare its accuracy to other codes. Specifically, we show that our implementation of external sources and time-advancement scheme is more accurate and robust than is AREPO when the mesh is allowed to move. We performed a parameter study of the cell rounding mechanism (Lloyd iterations) and its effects. We find that in most cases a moving mesh gives better results than a static mesh, but it is not universally true. In the case where matter moves in one way and a sound wave is traveling in the other way (such that relative to the grid the wave is not moving) a static mesh gives better results than a moving mesh. We perform an analytic analysis for finite difference schemes that reveals that a Lagrangian simulation is better than a Eulerian simulation in the case of a highly supersonic flow. Moreover, we show that Voronoi-based moving mesh schemes suffer from an error, which is resolution independent, due to inconsistencies between the flux calculation and the change in the area of a cell. Our code is publicly available as open source and designed in an object-oriented, user-friendly way that facilitates incorporation of new algorithms and physical processes.

Additional Information

© 2015 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2014 September 24; accepted 2015 January 12; published 2015 February 10. We thank Omer Bromberg and Orly Gnat, who wrote the HLLC solver. We also thank Jonathan Granot, Udi Nakar, and Tsvi Piran for helpful discussions. E.S. is supported by an Ilan Ramon grant from the Israeli Ministry of Science. This research is supported in part by ISF, ISA, iCORE grants, and a Packard Fellowship.

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Submitted - 1410.3219v1.pdf

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August 22, 2023
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