Disk formation in binaries using a co-rotating frame
The simulations in this blog are based on these ideas:
+https://clover.pas.rochester.edu/trac/astrobear/blog/johannjc04032012
++https://clover.pas.rochester.edu/trac/astrobear/blog/johannjc03312012
8May '12
- 30AU, rBondi=6, velw=10km/s, tw=1000K, with 96x96x144 + 2amr res, 4hrs, 40 afrank procs, bhive
- 30AU, tw=1000K,
- Movies of logarithmic density (grayscale)and linear velocity [Mach]:
- orbital plane http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/30au-1000k.gif
- orbital plane, zoom in http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/30au-1000k-z.gif
- longitudinal plane, zoom in http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/30au-1000k-z-l.gif
with 100x100x160 + 4amr res. No disk formed after .07 orbits (3days, 1024 ranger procs).
- Movies of logarithmic density (grayscale)and linear velocity [Mach]:
27 Apr '12
- 40AU, tw=3000K, with 1683 + 4amr res is running at ranger's long (1024p, 2days) queue.
- 10AU, tw=3000K, with 112x144x160 + 3amr res. No disk formed after .21 orbits.
Orbital plane Longitudinal plane
- Understanding/solving the dynamics of the 40au,
- Here's a temperature map of the whole orbital plane http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2-300K-gamma1.1e.gif.
- Hot gas (105 K) seem to discontinually emanate from the particle, specially early in the sim.
- Now running a short test, same parameters, with 10 times more frames.
- Temperature movie 2. 20 times faster frame rate than the temp movie above and zoomed in to the particle, http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2-300K-gamma1.1f.gif.
, tw=300K sim (below).
- Here's a temperature map of the whole orbital plane http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2-300K-gamma1.1e.gif.
26 Apr '12
- 10AU, tw=3000K, with ~643 + 2amr. No disk formed after 2 orbits (16hrs, 256 ranger procs). Trying 2 times more res.
- 40AU, tw=3000K, with ~1283 + 2amr. No disk formed after .44 orbits (1day 256 ranger procs). Images show a zoom in to the particle.
Orbital plane Longitudinal plane
- 40AU, tw=300K, ideal gas solver,
- ~1283+2amr, 0.2 orbits / 1day, 256 ranger procs.
- Movies of logarithmic density (grayscale)and linear velocity [Mach]:
- orbital plane http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2-300K-gamma1.1a.gif
- orbital plane, zoom in http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2-300K-gamma1.1b.gif
- longitudinal plane http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2-300K-gamma1.1c.gif
- longitudinal plane, zoom in http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2-300K-gamma1.1d.gif
- Jet? This corresponds to the last frame of this short test sim.
. Very interesting dynamics.
Though I was expecting differences between the http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2000MNRAS.316..906M. One has to be careful though for their parameters are in general different than ours.
and cases, I'm surprised that they are SO different. This is inconsistent with24 Apr '12. Research meeting. To try:
- 10AU and 40AU low res and twind=3000K, instead of 300K. Tests ran
- 40AU, twind=300K, ideal gas solver, . short test ran
- Jonathan's latest thread implementation on the global (2 particle) sims.
23 Apr '12
- separation = 40AU
- mprim= 1.5 Mo
- msec = 1 Mo
- tempw = 300 K
- densw = 1.5x1011 gr/cc
- vw = 15 km/s = 15 Mach
- vorbit-sec = 4.5 km/s
- rBondi = Gmsec/ ( vw2 + vorbit-sec2 )= 3.6 AU
- rsoft = 4 cells
- rBondi/rsoft = 19.3
- rorbit/rBondi = 6.62
A) low res=56x72x80 + 3 particle Ref. .43 orbits / 26 hrs with ~ 32 afrank nodes in bhive. Running.
Movies:
- dens+vels, secondary zoom in, http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2z.gif
- dens+vels, secondary zoom in, longitudinal plane http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-40au-sol2l.gif
Tilt?. At some point during this simulation I see a rather brief (lasting for ~ 0.005 orbits) tilted disk-like structure similar to the ones I saw in the global (2 particles) sims (https://clover.pas.rochester.edu/trac/astrobear/blog/binaryBondi, top table). |
B) high res= 56x72x80 + 5 particle Ref. .05 orbits / 20 hrs with 256 ranger procs. Running. Note the images below show gas at a point at which the mass of the secondary is increasing to reach its final 1Mo value. This was dome for numerical stabilization and, given that we want to run the sim for several orbits, it should not affect the formation/evolution of the disk.
Gas momenta. I'm using this plot trying to understand why gas is not going about the seconday as expected. |
20 Apr '12
We've determined that Jonathan's module template does not have a frame/secondary which follow a circular orbit and has extreme parameters. Presumably, a disk is formed in such setup, with a separation as large as 350AU, because the unstable orbit is subject to a lot shear from the flow which might make rotation about the secondary easier.
The 1st, intermediate-res test with the full wind solution (wind+secondary's gravity) has completed for
- separation = 10AU
- mprim= 1.5 Mo
- msec = 1 Mo
- tempw = 300 K
- densw = 1.5x1011 gr/cc
- vw = 15 km/s = 15 Mach
- vorbit-sec = 8.9 km/s
- rBondi = Gmsec/vw2 = 4 AU
- rsoft = 4 cells
- rBondi/rsoft = 21
- rorbit/rBondi = 1.52
- running time ~ 1 orbit/11hrs (16afrank, bhive nodes)
Movies:
- dens+vels, http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-10au1.gif
- dens+vels, secondary zoom in, http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-10au2.gif
- ram pressure, zoom in, http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot-10au3.gif
Higher res test running now. Note that we've not used this (new) wind solution for the 40AU case.
19 Apr '12 Trying to understand why Jonathan's setup+ forms a disk while mine (below) doesn't. Here's a parameter comparison.
Jonathan | Martin | |
---|---|---|
mprim [Mo] | 1.1 | 1.5 |
msec [Mo] | .19 | 1 |
separation [AU] | 350 | 40 |
tempw [K] | 0.01 | 300 |
densw [part cm-3] | 1a | 1.5x1011 |
vwb [km/s] | .9 | 15 |
vorbit-sec [km/s] | .54c | 4.5 |
rBondi [AU] | 200 | 4 |
rsoft [cells] | 4 | 4 |
a
.
b
c
.The combined mass and the separation in the run of the left column seem extreme.
16 Apr '12
Same parameters as the run below, but a slightly larger grid and 3 spatially fixed refinement (particle) levels, http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/corot1.gif.
- Discussion and further analysis needed.
- I do not see a disk forming. Will try with 2 more refinements in order to have ~ 40cells/rBondi.
- The flow shows some strange pulsations not related to protections.
- The accretion tail is not a collimated one, like that in the low res run (below), and it broadens up.
6 Apr '12
I've got Jonathan's new co-rotating frame setup+,++ running for a binary system with the parameters below which are representative of my previous lab frame binary runs (see the table below):
- Tempwind=300K
- AGB mass-loss = 10-5 Mo yr-1
- velwind=9 km/s (as in Mastrodemos & Morris)
- velwind/vel_orbitsec = 2.01
- a=40AU
- circular orbit
- q=mpri/msec=1.5
- rsoft=4 cells
- 64x64x128 cells, fixed+++
- grid: 40x40x80 AU.
- trun~.5 orbit/hr in 16 debug bluehive procs
- dxco-rotating ~ 13 dxlab frame
Log(dens) and vel field movie. Pole-on (left) edge-on (right). The green diagonal line in the left panel show the direction of the plane corresponding to the right panel. A disk forms. The tail formed by accretion eventually gets inflow from -Y. The tail is bent then. The edge-on panel shows asymmetries. We are unresolved with respect to the global (lab frame) simulations to fairly compare/conclude anything about disk tilting at this point. |
http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/coRot1.gif |
Here's a second try at this sim but with a larger grid. This last sim will run, any time now, at bhive with 512procs and 1283+3amr. |
http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~martinhe/2011/binary/coRot2.gif |
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