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Introducing a new multi-particle collision method for the evolution of dense stellar systems. Crash-test N-body simulations (2006.16018v2)

Published 29 Jun 2020 in astro-ph.GA

Abstract: Stellar systems are broadly divided into collisional and non-collisional. The latter are large-N systems with long relaxation timescales and can be simulated disregarding two-body interactions, while either computationally expensive direct N-body simulations or approximate schemes are required to properly model the former. Large globular clusters and nuclear star clusters, with relaxation timescales of the order of a Hubble time, are small enough to display some collisional behaviour and big enough to be impossible to simulate with direct $N$-body codes and current hardware. We introduce a new method to simulate collisional stellar systems, and validate it by comparison with direct $N$-body codes on small-$N$ simulations. The Multi-Particle collision for Dense stellar systems Code (MPCDSS) is a new code for evolving stellar systems with the Multi-Particle Collision method. Such method amounts to a stochastic collision rule that allows to conserve exactly the energy and momentum over a cluster of particles experiencing the collision. The code complexity scales with $N \log N$ in the number of particles. Unlike Monte-Carlo codes, MPCDSS can easily model asymmetric, non-homogeneous, unrelaxed and rotating systems, while allowing us to follow the orbits of individual stars. We evolve small ($N = 3.2 \times 104$) star clusters with MPCDSS and with the direct-summation code NBODY6, finding a similar evolution of key indicators. We then simulate different initial conditions in the $104 - 106$ star range. MPCDSS bridges the gap between small, collisional systems that can be simulated with direct $N$-body codes and large noncollisional systems. MPCDSS in principle allows us to simulate globular clusters such as Omega Cen and M54 and even the nuclear star cluster, beyond the limits of current direct N-body codes in terms of the number of particles.

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