On the convergence of the critical cooling timescale for the fragmentation of self-gravitating discs
Farzana Meru, Matthew R. Bate

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the critical cooling timescale for disc fragmentation converges with higher resolution in simulations, and previous non-convergent results underestimated this threshold, impacting our understanding of disc stability.
Contribution
The paper provides evidence of convergence in critical cooling timescale calculations using both SPH and grid-based codes, highlighting the importance of numerical viscosity in these results.
Findings
Convergence occurs with increasing resolution in both SPH and FARGO simulations.
Critical cooling timescale for fragmentation is larger than previously reported, around 20-30.
Numerical viscosity significantly influences the convergence and the critical cooling timescale.
Abstract
We carry out simulations of gravitationally unstable discs using a Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) code and a grid-based hydrodynamics code, FARGO, to understand the previous non-convergent results reported by Meru & Bate (2011a). We obtain evidence that convergence with increasing resolution occurs with both SPH and FARGO and in both cases we find that the critical cooling timescale is larger than previously thought. We show that SPH has a first-order convergence rate while FARGO converges with a second-order rate. We show that the convergence of the critical cooling timescale for fragmentation depends largely on the numerical viscosity employed in both SPH and FARGO. With SPH, particle velocity dispersion may also play a role. We show that reducing the dissipation from the numerical viscosity leads to larger values of the critical cooling time at a given resolution. For SPH, we…
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