The influence of frequency-dependent radiative transfer on the structures of radiative shocks
N. Vaytet, M. Gonzalez, E. Audit, G. Chabrier

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that frequency-dependent radiative transfer significantly affects the structure and dynamics of radiative shocks in argon, with the results converging at around 50 frequency groups, highlighting the importance of multigroup modeling.
Contribution
The paper introduces multigroup radiative transfer simulations for radiative shocks, showing the impact of frequency dependence on shock morphology and the necessity of multiple groups for accurate modeling.
Findings
Simulations with multiple frequency groups differ significantly from grey models.
Convergence of results occurs above 50 groups.
High-opacity groups can heat the gas beyond post-shock temperature.
Abstract
Radiative shocks are shocks in a gas where the radiative energy and flux coming from the very hot post-shock material are non-negligible in the shock's total energy budget, and are often large enough to heat the material ahead of the shock. Many simulations of radiative shocks, both in the contexts of astrophysics and laboratory experiments, use a grey treatment of radiative transfer coupled to the hydrodynamics. However, the opacities of the gas show large variations as a function of frequency and this needs to be taken into account if one wishes to reproduce the relevant physics. We have performed radiation hydrodynamics simulations of radiative shocks in Ar using multigroup (frequency dependent) radiative transfer with the HERACLES code. The opacities were taken from the ODALISC database. We show the influence of the number of frequency groups used on the dynamics and morphologies of…
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