Subsonic turbulence in smoothed particle hydrodynamics and moving-mesh simulations
Andreas Bauer (1), Volker Springel (1, 2) ((1) HITS, (2) ZAH)

TL;DR
This study compares smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) and moving-mesh simulations in modeling subsonic turbulence, revealing SPH's limitations in accurately capturing subsonic turbulent cascades and highlighting the advantages of the moving-mesh approach.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that standard SPH techniques poorly represent subsonic turbulence, whereas the moving-mesh method accurately reproduces expected turbulence spectra.
Findings
SPH dampens large-scale eddies in subsonic turbulence
Moving-mesh yields power-law velocity spectra consistent with Kolmogorov turbulence
SPH's gradient errors cause inaccuracies in subsonic velocity noise
Abstract
Highly supersonic, compressible turbulence is thought to be of tantamount importance for star formation processes in the interstellar medium. Likewise, cosmic structure formation is expected to give rise to subsonic turbulence in the intergalactic medium, which may substantially modify the thermodynamic structure of gas in virialized dark matter halos and affect small-scale mixing processes in the gas. Numerical simulations have played a key role in characterizing the properties of astrophysical turbulence, but thus far systematic code comparisons have been restricted to the supersonic regime, leaving it unclear whether subsonic turbulence is faithfully represented by the numerical techniques commonly employed in astrophysics. Here we focus on comparing the accuracy of smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) and our new moving-mesh technique AREPO in simulations of driven subsonic…
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