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Published November 15, 2021 | Published
Journal Article Open

Dissipative magnetohydrodynamics for nonresistive relativistic plasmas: An implicit second-order flux-conservative formulation with stiff relaxation

Abstract

Based on a 14-moment closure for nonresistive (general-) relativistic viscous plasmas, we describe a new numerical scheme that is able to handle all first-order dissipative effects (heat conduction, bulk and shear viscosities), as well the anisotropies induced by the presence of magnetic fields. The latter is parametrized in terms of a thermal gyrofrequency or, equivalently, a thermal Larmor radius and allows to correctly capture the thermal Hall effect. By solving an extended Israel-Stewart-like system for the dissipative quantities that enforces algebraic constraints via stiff-relaxation, we are able to cast all first-order dissipative terms in flux-divergence form. This allows us to apply traditional high-resolution shock capturing methods to the equations, making the system suitable for the numerical study of highly turbulent flows. We present several numerical tests to assess the robustness of our numerical scheme in flat spacetime. The 14-moment closure can seamlessly interpolate between the highly collisional limit found in neutron star mergers, and the highly anisotropic limit of relativistic Braginskii magnetohydrodynamics appropriate for weakly collisional plasmas in black-hole accretion problems. We believe that this new formulation and numerical scheme will be useful for a broad class of relativistic magnetized flows.

Additional Information

© 2021 American Physical Society. The authors thank Lev Arzamasskiy, Fabio Bemfica, Amitava Bhattarcharjee, Mani Chandra, Gabriel Denicol, Marcelo Disconzi, Charles Gammie, James Juno, Alex Pandya, Frans Pretorius, Alexander Philippov, Bart Ripperda and James Stone for insightful discussions and comments related to this work. E. R. M. gratefully acknowledges support from postdoctoral fellowships at the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science, the Princeton Gravity Initiative, and the Institute for Advanced Study. J. N. is partially supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office for Nuclear Physics under Award No. DE-SC0021301. All simulations were performed on the Helios Cluster at the Institute for Advanced Study. Part of this work was performed at the Aspen Center for Physics, which is supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. PHY-1607611. The participation of E. R. M. at the Aspen Center for Physics was supported by the Simons Foundation.

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Published - PhysRevD.104.103028.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023