The Failure of Monte Carlo Radiative Transfer at Medium to High Optical Depths
Peter Camps, Maarten Baes

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that Monte Carlo radiative transfer methods become unreliable at medium to high optical depths, especially above 20 to 75, due to statistical and biasing issues, necessitating alternative approaches.
Contribution
It reveals the limitations of standard Monte Carlo radiative transfer techniques at high optical depths and highlights the need for improved methods like modified random walks.
Findings
Monte Carlo methods fail above optical depth ~20 without biasing.
Biasing techniques can lead to underestimation of radiation intensity.
Methods break down completely above optical depth ~75.
Abstract
Computer simulations of photon transport through an absorbing and/or scattering medium form an important research tool in astrophysics. Nearly all software codes performing such simulations for three-dimensional geometries employ the Monte Carlo radiative transfer method, including various forms of biasing to accelerate the calculations. Because of the probabilistic nature of the Monte Carlo technique, the outputs are inherently noisy, but it is often assumed that the average values provide the physically correct result. We show that this assumption is not always justified. Specifically, we study the intensity of radiation penetrating an infinite, uniform slab of material that absorbs and scatters the radiation with equal probability. The basic Monte Carlo radiative transfer method, without any biasing mechanisms, starts to break down for transverse optical depths above ~20 because so…
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