Nexus: A framework for conrolled simulations of idealised galaxies
Thor Tepper-Garcia, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Eugene Vasiliev, Oscar, Agertz, Romain Teyssier, and Christoph Federrath

TL;DR
NEXUS is a comprehensive framework that creates and evolves realistic, self-consistent galaxy models with collisionless and gaseous components, enabling detailed studies of galaxy dynamics and evolution over billions of years.
Contribution
We developed NEXUS, a novel framework integrating existing tools to generate and evolve equilibrium galaxy models with gas and stars, including gaseous components and galaxy formation physics.
Findings
Successfully generated equilibrium galaxy models with gas fractions up to 1
Reproduced several known isolated galaxy setups as validation
Created a new nested bar galaxy simulation
Abstract
Motivated by the need for realistic, dynamically self-consistent, evolving galaxy models that avoid the complexity of full, and zoom-in, cosmological simulations, we have developed NEXUS, an integral framework to create and evolve synthetic galaxies made of collisionless and gaseous components. NEXUS leverages the power of publicly available, tried-and-tested packages: the stellar-dynamics, action-based library AGAMA; and the adaptive mesh refinement, N-body/hydrodynamical code RAMSES, modified to meet our needs. In addition, we make use of a proprietary module to account for galaxy formation physics, including gas cooling and heating, star formation, stellar feedback, and chemical enrichment. NEXUS' basic functionality consists in the generation of bespoke initial conditions (ICs) for a diversity of galaxy models, which are advanced in time to simulate the galaxy's evolution. The fully…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Simulation Techniques and Applications · Cellular Automata and Applications
