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Main Authors: Fryer, Christopher L., Keiter, Paul A., Sharma, Vidushi, Leveillee, Joshua, Meyerhofer, D. D., Barnak, D. H., Byvank, Tom, Elshafiey, A. T., Fontes, Christopher J., Johns, Heather M., Kozlowski, P. M., Urbatsch, Todd
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.16677
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author Fryer, Christopher L.
Keiter, Paul A.
Sharma, Vidushi
Leveillee, Joshua
Meyerhofer, D. D.
Barnak, D. H.
Byvank, Tom
Elshafiey, A. T.
Fontes, Christopher J.
Johns, Heather M.
Kozlowski, P. M.
Urbatsch, Todd
author_facet Fryer, Christopher L.
Keiter, Paul A.
Sharma, Vidushi
Leveillee, Joshua
Meyerhofer, D. D.
Barnak, D. H.
Byvank, Tom
Elshafiey, A. T.
Fontes, Christopher J.
Johns, Heather M.
Kozlowski, P. M.
Urbatsch, Todd
contents Radiation flow through an inhomogeneous medium is critical in a wide range of physics and astronomy applications from transport across cloud layers on the earth to the propagation of supernova blast-waves producing UV and X-ray emission in supernovae. Radiation interacts with matter driving hydrodynamic feedback that further alters the radiation characteristics (energy and angular distribution). This paper reviews the current state of the art in the modeling of inhomogeneous radiation transport, subgrid models developed to capture this often-unresolved physics, and the experiments designed to improve our understanding of these models. This paper focuses on simulations based on upcoming experiments designed to test this physics. We present a series of detailed simulations (both single-clump and multi-clump conditions) probing the dependence on the physical properties of the radiation front (e.g. radiation energy) and material characteristics (specific heat, opacity, clump densities). We find that, unless the radiation pressure is high, the clumps will heat and then expand, effectively cutting off the radiation flow. The expanding winds can also produce shocks that generates high energy emission. We compare our detailed simulations with some of the current subgrid prescriptions, identifying some of the limitations of these current models.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2312_16677
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Radiation-Hydrodynamics Effects in an Inhomogeneous Medium
Fryer, Christopher L.
Keiter, Paul A.
Sharma, Vidushi
Leveillee, Joshua
Meyerhofer, D. D.
Barnak, D. H.
Byvank, Tom
Elshafiey, A. T.
Fontes, Christopher J.
Johns, Heather M.
Kozlowski, P. M.
Urbatsch, Todd
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Radiation flow through an inhomogeneous medium is critical in a wide range of physics and astronomy applications from transport across cloud layers on the earth to the propagation of supernova blast-waves producing UV and X-ray emission in supernovae. Radiation interacts with matter driving hydrodynamic feedback that further alters the radiation characteristics (energy and angular distribution). This paper reviews the current state of the art in the modeling of inhomogeneous radiation transport, subgrid models developed to capture this often-unresolved physics, and the experiments designed to improve our understanding of these models. This paper focuses on simulations based on upcoming experiments designed to test this physics. We present a series of detailed simulations (both single-clump and multi-clump conditions) probing the dependence on the physical properties of the radiation front (e.g. radiation energy) and material characteristics (specific heat, opacity, clump densities). We find that, unless the radiation pressure is high, the clumps will heat and then expand, effectively cutting off the radiation flow. The expanding winds can also produce shocks that generates high energy emission. We compare our detailed simulations with some of the current subgrid prescriptions, identifying some of the limitations of these current models.
title Radiation-Hydrodynamics Effects in an Inhomogeneous Medium
topic Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.16677