On the accuracy of common moment-based radiative transfer methods for simulating reionization
Xiaohan Wu, Matthew McQuinn, Daniel Eisenstein

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the accuracy of common moment-based radiative transfer methods in simulating reionization, highlighting their limitations in post-reionization scenarios and the need for more precise angular resolution.
Contribution
The study critically assesses the performance of Eddington tensor closure methods, revealing their inaccuracies in modeling post-reionization ionizing backgrounds and fluctuations.
Findings
OTVET and M1 over-ionize self-shielding absorbers.
These algorithms underestimate the metagalactic photoionization rate.
They fail to accurately reproduce ionizing background fluctuations.
Abstract
Cosmological simulations of reionization often treat radiative transfer by solving for the monopole and dipoles of the intensity field and by making ansatz for the quadrupole moments to close the system of equations. We investigate the accuracy of the most common closure methods, i.e. Eddington tensor choices. We argue that these algorithms are most likely to err after reionization and study quasi-analytic test problems mimicking these situations: large-scale post-reionization ionizing background fluctuations and radiative transfer in a predominantly ionized medium with discrete absorbers. We show that OTVET and M1 over-ionize self-shielding absorbers when fixing the background photoionization rate, leading to 30-40% higher emissivity to balance the increased recombination. This over-ionization results in a simulation run with these algorithms having a factor of ~2 lower average…
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