Abstract

We present a new open-source axisymmetric general relativistic hydrodynamics code Gmunu (general-relativistic multigrid numerical solver) which uses a multigrid method to solve the elliptic metric equations in the conformally flat condition (CFC) approximation on a spherical grid. Most of the existing relativistic hydrodynamics codes are based on formulations which rely on a free-evolution approach of numerical relativity, where the metric variables are determined by hyperbolic equations without enforcing the constraint equations in the evolution. On the other hand, although a fully constrained-evolution formulation is theoretical more appealing and should lead to more stable and accurate simulations, such an approach is not widely used because solving the elliptic-type constraint equations during the evolution is in general more computationally expensive than hyperbolic free-evolution schemes. Multigrid methods solve differential equations with a hierarchy of discretizations and its computational cost is generally lower than other methods such as direct methods, relaxation methods, successive over-relaxation. With multigrid acceleration, one can solve the metric equations on a comparable time scale as solving the hydrodynamics equations. This would potentially make a fully constrained-evolution formulation more affordable in numerical relativity simulations. As a first step to assess the performance and robustness of multigrid methods in relativistic simulations, we develop a hydrodynamics code that makes use of standard finite-volume methods coupled with a multigrid metric solver to solve the Einstein equations in the CFC approximation. In this paper, we present the methodology and implementation of our code Gmunu and its properties and performance in some benchmarking relativistic hydrodynamics problems.

Highlights

  • In the past decade, numerical relativity has matured to the state that stable and robust numerical calculations of the Einstein equations with or without matter has become feasible

  • We present the methodology and implementation of our new open-source axisymmetric general relativistic hydrodynamics code Gmunu (Generalrelativistic MUltigrid NUmerical solver), which solves the hydrodynamics equations using standard finite-volume methods and the xCFC metric equations using a multigrid approach on a spherical grid

  • We present the methodology and implementation of Gmunu, a new general-relativistic hydrodynamics code which makes use of cell-centered nonlinear multigrid methods to solve the elliptic-type metric equations in the extended conformally flat condition approximation to general relativity

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Summary

Introduction

Numerical relativity has matured to the state that stable and robust numerical calculations of the Einstein equations with or without matter has become feasible. One still has the freedom to choose the basic variables to evolve and reformulate the resulting systems of differential equations in order to improve the stability and accuracy of numerical simulations. This results in different formulations of numerical relativity, such as the so-called BSSN [49, 2], CCZ4 [7], and Z4c [6] schemes, which are popular choices for numerical modelings. The practical applications of these different formulations are based on a free-evolution approach where the constraint equations are first solved for preparing the initial data and used subsequently only as an indicator to monitor the numerical accuracy during the evolution (see, e.g., [37])

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