An adaptively refined phase-space element method for cosmological simulations and collisionless dynamics
Oliver Hahn (1), Raul E. Angulo (2) ((1) ETH Zurich, (2) CEFCA)

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel adaptively refined phase-space element method for cosmological simulations that accurately models collisionless systems by explicitly tracking the distribution function and suppressing numerical artifacts.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new geometrical approach using adaptively refineable phase space elements to improve the accuracy of collisionless fluid simulations over traditional N-body methods.
Findings
Method accurately follows fine-grained distribution functions.
Suppresses spurious collisionality and discreteness noise.
Eliminates need for force softening in simulations.
Abstract
N-body simulations are essential for understanding the formation and evolution of structure in the Universe. However, the discrete nature of these simulations affects their accuracy when modelling collisionless systems. We introduce a new approach to simulate the gravitational evolution of cold collisionless fluids by solving the Vlasov-Poisson equations in terms of adaptively refineable "Lagrangian phase space elements". These geometrical elements are piecewise smooth maps between Lagrangian space and Eulerian phase space and approximate the continuum structure of the distribution function. They allow for dynamical adaptive splitting to accurately follow the evolution even in regions of very strong mixing. We discuss in detail various one-, two- and three-dimensional test problems to demonstrate the performance of our method. Its advantages compared to N-body algorithms are: i)…
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