Markert, Johannes ORCID: 0000-0001-6297-9494 (2022). Discontinuous Galerkin Spectral Element Methods for Astrophysical Flows in Multi-physics Applications. PhD thesis, Universität zu Köln.
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PDF (PhD thesis)
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Abstract
In engineering applications, discontinuous Galerkin methods (DG) have been proven to be a powerful and flexible class of high order methods for problems in computational fluid dynamics. However, the potential benefits of DG for applications in astrophysical contexts is still relatively unexplored in its entirety. To this day, a decent number of studies surveying DG for astrophysical flows have been conducted. But the adoption of DG by the astrophysics community is just beginning to gain traction and integration of DG into established, multi-physics simulation frameworks for comprehensive astrophysical modeling is still lacking. It is our firm believe, that the full potential of novel approaches for numerically solving the fluid equations only shows under the pressure of real-world simulations with all aspects of multi-physics, challenging flow configurations, resolution and runtime constraints, and efficiency metrics on high-performance systems involved. Thus, we see the pressing need to propel DG from the well-trodden path of cataloguing test results under "optimal" laboratory conditions towards the harsh and unforgiving environment of large-scale astrophysics simulations. Consequently, the core of this work is the development and deployment of a robust DG scheme solving the ideal magneto-hydrodynamics equations with multiple species on three-dimensional Cartesian grids with adaptive mesh refinement. We chose to implement DG within the venerable simulation framework FLASH, with a specific focus on multi-physics problems in astrophysics. This entails modifications of the vanilla DG scheme to make it fit seamlessly within FLASH in such a way that all other physics modules can be naturally coupled without additional implementation overhead. A key ingredient is that our DG scheme uses mean value data organized into blocks - the central data structure in FLASH. Having the opportunity to work on mean values, allows us to rely on a rock-solid, monotone Finite Volume (FV) scheme as "backup" whenever the high order DG method fails in cases when the flow gets too harsh. Finding ways to combine the two schemes in a fail-safe manner without loosing primary conservation while still maintaining high order accuracy for smooth, well-resolved flows involves a series of careful considerations, which we document in this thesis. The result of our work is a novel shock capturing scheme - a hybrid between FV and DG - with smooth transitions between low and high order fluxes according to solution smoothness estimators. We present extensive validations and test cases, specifically its interaction with multi-physics modules in FLASH such as (self-)gravity and radiative transfer. We also investigate the benefits and pitfalls of integrating end-to-end entropy stability into our numerical scheme, with special focus on highly compressible turbulent flows and shocks. Our implementation of DG in FLASH allows us to conduct preliminary yet comprehensive astrophysics simulations proving that our new solver is ready for assessments and investigations by the astrophysics community.
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD thesis) | ||||||||
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URN: | urn:nbn:de:hbz:38-616945 | ||||||||
Date: | 20 March 2022 | ||||||||
Language: | English | ||||||||
Faculty: | Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences | ||||||||
Divisions: | Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences > Department of Mathematics and Computer Science > Mathematical Institute | ||||||||
Subjects: | Mathematics Physics |
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Date of oral exam: | 30 May 2022 | ||||||||
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Funders: | Klaus-Tschira Stiftung (Project "DG2RAV"), European Research Council (Starting Grant "EXTREME, no. 71448") | ||||||||
Refereed: | Yes | ||||||||
URI: | http://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/id/eprint/61694 |
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