1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 January 2010
Summary
Relativistic numerical hydrodynamics is currently a field of intense interest. On the one hand, the development of next-generation laser interferometric and cryogenic gravity wave detectors is opening a new window of astronomy, one which will peer into a world of multidimensional rapidly varying matter and gravity fields such as occur in and around neutron stars, black holes, supernovae, compact binary systems, dense clusters, collapsing stars, the early universe, etc. At the same time, X-ray and γ-ray observatories are providing (or will soon provide) a wealth of data on the evolution of matter in and around X-ray and γ-ray emitting compact objects such as accreting black holes and neutron stars. Such systems can only be realistically analyzed by a detailed numerical study of the spacetime and matter fields.
A quantitative understanding of these systems as well as a host of other astrophysical phenomena such as stellar collapse leading to supernovae, the evolution of massive stars, and the origin of γ-ray bursts, the origin and evolution of relativistic jets, all require multidimensional complex relativistic numerical simulations in three spatial dimensions. Since analytic and post-Newtonian methods are only applicable for systems of special symmetry and/or relatively weak fields, numerical relativistic hydrodynamics is the only viable method to model such highly dynamical asymmetrical strong field systems.
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- Information
- Relativistic Numerical Hydrodynamics , pp. 1 - 22Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003