Errors, chaos and the collisionless limit
Amr El-Zant, Mark Everitt, Summer Kassem

TL;DR
This paper investigates error growth in N-body simulations, revealing how errors evolve, saturate, and relate to the collisionless limit, with implications for simulation fidelity and convergence.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of error growth phases and their dependence on N, offering new insights into the convergence to the collisionless limit in N-body systems.
Findings
Error growth is initially random and independent of N
Error saturation scales as 1/√N, aligning with theoretical estimates
Errors in phase space grow through phase mixing, while conserved quantities grow diffusively
Abstract
We simultaneously study the dynamics of the growth of errors and the question of the faithfulness of simulations of -body systems. The errors are quantified through the numerical reversibility of small- spherical systems, and by comparing fixed-timestep runs with different stepsizes. The errors add randomly, before exponential divergence sets in, with exponentiation rate virtually independent of , but scale saturating as , in line with theoretical estimates presented. In a third phase, the growth rate is initially driven by multiplicative enhancement of errors, as in the exponential stage. It is then qualitatively different for the phase space variables and mean field conserved quantities (energy and momentum); for the former, the errors grow systematically through phase mixing, for the latter they grow diffusively. For energy, the -variation of the…
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