NANAGR-QCMay 11

High order numerical discretizations of the Einstein-Euler equations in the Generalized Harmonic formulation

arXiv:2512.2412149.82 citationsh-index: 30
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For researchers in numerical relativity and astrophysics, these schemes provide a foundation for more complex simulations on unstructured 3D meshes, though the work is incremental as it extends existing methods to a new formulation.

The paper introduces two new numerical schemes (CWENO and ADER-DG) for solving the coupled Einstein-Euler equations in the Generalized Harmonic formulation, demonstrating long-term stable evolutions of stationary black holes and successful tests including spherical accretion and perturbed neutron stars.

We propose two new alternative numerical schemes to solve the coupled Einstein-Euler equations in the Generalized Harmonic formulation. The first one is a finite difference (FD) Central Weighted Essentially Non-Oscillatory (CWENO) scheme on a traditional Cartesian mesh, while the second one is an ADER (Arbitrary high order Derivatives) discontinuous Galerkin (DG) scheme on 2D unstructured polygonal meshes. The latter, in particular, represents a preliminary step in view of a full 3D numerical relativity calculation on moving meshes. Both schemes are equipped with a well-balancing (WB) property, which allows to preserve the equilibrium of a priori known stationary solutions exactly at the discrete level. We validate our numerical approaches by successfully reproducing standard vacuum test cases, such as the robust stability, the linearized wave, and the gauge wave tests, as well as achieving long-term stable evolutions of stationary black holes, including Kerr black holes with extreme spin. Concerning the coupling with matter, modeled by the relativistic Euler equations, we perform some special relativistic Riemann problems, a classical test of spherical accretion onto a Schwarzschild black hole, as well as an evolution of a perturbed non-rotating neutron star, demonstrating the capability of our schemes to operate also on the full Einstein-Euler system. Altogether, these results provide a solid foundation for addressing more complex and challenging simulations of astrophysical sources through DG schemes on unstructured 3D meshes.

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