Implicit-explicit (IMEX) evolution of single black holes
Stephen R. Lau, Geoffrey Lovelace, and Harald P. Pfeiffer

TL;DR
This paper introduces an implicit-explicit (IMEX) evolution algorithm for black-hole spacetimes, aiming to improve computational efficiency in simulating binary black holes by allowing larger timesteps while maintaining accuracy.
Contribution
The paper develops and tests the first IMEX algorithm for the generalized harmonic formulation of Einstein's equations, enabling more efficient black-hole spacetime evolutions.
Findings
IMEX method demonstrates stability in black-hole evolutions.
IMEX approach reduces computational cost compared to explicit methods.
Algorithm successfully evolves stationary and perturbed black-hole spacetimes.
Abstract
Numerical simulations of binary black holes---an important predictive tool for the detection of gravitational waves---are computationally expensive, especially for binaries with high mass ratios or with rapidly spinning constituent holes. Existing codes for evolving binary black holes rely on explicit timestepping methods, for which the timestep size is limited by the smallest spatial scale through the Courant-Friedrichs-Lewy condition. Binary inspiral typically involves spatial scales (the spatial resolution required by a small or rapidly spinning hole) which are orders of magnitude smaller than the relevant (orbital, precession, and radiation-reaction) timescales characterizing the inspiral. Therefore, in explicit evolutions of binary black holes, the timestep size is typically orders of magnitude smaller than the relevant physical timescales. Implicit timestepping methods allow for…
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