The AGORA High-Resolution Galaxy Simulations Comparison Project. II: Isolated Disk Test
Ji-hoon Kim (1, 2, 3, 4), Oscar Agertz (5, 6), Romain Teyssier (7),, Michael J. Butler (8), Daniel Ceverino (9), Jun-Hwan Choi (10), Robert, Feldmann (7,11), Ben W. Keller (12), Alessandro Lupi (13), Thomas Quinn (14),, Yves Revaz (15), Spencer Wallace (14)

TL;DR
This study compares nine advanced galaxy simulation codes using common initial conditions and physics models, finding high agreement in many properties and emphasizing the importance of input physics over numerical differences.
Contribution
It provides a systematic comparison of galaxy simulation codes with standardized setups, highlighting the robustness of results and the impact of input physics versus numerical schemes.
Findings
Codes agree well on surface densities, rotation curves, and star formation rates.
Velocity dispersions are highly consistent across codes.
Differences in subgrid physics have a larger impact than numerical scheme variations.
Abstract
Using an isolated Milky Way-mass galaxy simulation, we compare results from 9 state-of-the-art gravito-hydrodynamics codes widely used in the numerical community. We utilize the infrastructure we have built for the AGORA High-resolution Galaxy Simulations Comparison Project. This includes the common disk initial conditions, common physics models (e.g., radiative cooling and UV background by the standardized package Grackle) and common analysis toolkit yt, all of which are publicly available. Subgrid physics models such as Jeans pressure floor, star formation, supernova feedback energy, and metal production are carefully constrained across code platforms. With numerical accuracy that resolves the disk scale height, we find that the codes overall agree well with one another in many dimensions including: gas and stellar surface densities, rotation curves, velocity dispersions, density and…
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