Frequency-dependent Discrete Implicit Monte-Carlo Scheme for the Radiative Transfer Equation

This work generalizes the discrete implicit Monte-Carlo (DIMC) method for modeling the radiative transfer equation from a gray treatment to an frequency-dependent one. The classic implicit Monte-Carlo (IMC) algorithm, that has been used for several decades, suffers from a well-known numerical proble...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2023-03
Hauptverfasser: Steinberg, Elad, Heizler, Shay I
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This work generalizes the discrete implicit Monte-Carlo (DIMC) method for modeling the radiative transfer equation from a gray treatment to an frequency-dependent one. The classic implicit Monte-Carlo (IMC) algorithm, that has been used for several decades, suffers from a well-known numerical problem, called teleportation, where the photons might propagate faster than the exact solution due to the finite size of the spatial and temporal resolution. The Semi-analog Monte-Carlo algorithm proposed the use of two kinds of particles, photons and material particles that are born when a photon is absorbed. The material particle can `propagate' only by transforming into a photon, due to black-body emission. While this algorithm produces a teleportation-free result, it is noisier results compared to IMC due to the discrete nature of the absorption-emission process. In a previous work [Steinberg and Heizler, ApJS, 258:14 (2022)], proposed a gray version of DIMC, that makes use of two kinds of particles, and therefore has teleportation-free results, but also uses the continuous absorption algorithm of IMC, yielding smoother results. This work is a direct frequency-dependent (energy-dependent) generalization of the DIMC algorithm. We find in several one and two dimensional benchmarks, that the new frequency-dependent DIMC algorithm yields teleportation-free results on one hand, and smooth results with IMC-like noise level.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2303.06634