Numerical Methods for Simulating Star Formation
Romain Teyssier, Benoit Commercon

TL;DR
This paper reviews numerical techniques for simulating star formation, focusing on MHD methods, challenges in modeling turbulent, radiative, self-gravitating fluids, and the implementation of non-ideal MHD effects.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of numerical methods, error estimation, and physical modeling techniques specifically tailored for star formation simulations.
Findings
Discusses importance of divergence-free magnetic fields in simulations.
Highlights challenges of resolution and time stepping in non-ideal MHD modeling.
Reviews techniques for modeling turbulence, gravity, and radiative effects in star formation.
Abstract
We review the numerical techniques for ideal and non-ideal magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD) used in the context of star formation simulations. We outline the specific challenges offered by modeling star forming environments, which are dominated by supersonic and super-Alfvenic turbulence in a radiative, self-gravitating fluid. These conditions are rather unique in physics and engineering and pose particularly severe restrictions on the robustness and accuracy of numerical codes. One striking aspect is the formation of collapsing fluid elements leading to the formation of singularities that represent point-like objects, namely the proto-stars. Although a few studies have attempted to resolve the formation of the first and second Larson cores, resolution limitations force us to use sink particle techniques, with sub-grid models to compute the accretion rates of mass, momentum and energy, as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
