Radiance Cascades: A Novel High-Resolution Formal Solution for Multidimensional Non-LTE Radiative Transfer
Non-LTE radiative transfer is a key tool for modern astrophysics: it is the means by which many key synthetic observables are produced, thus connecting simulations and observations. Radiative transfer models also inform our understanding of the primary formation layers and parameters of different sp...
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Main Authors | , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
26.08.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Non-LTE radiative transfer is a key tool for modern astrophysics: it is the
means by which many key synthetic observables are produced, thus connecting
simulations and observations. Radiative transfer models also inform our
understanding of the primary formation layers and parameters of different
spectral lines, and serve as the basis of inversion tools used to infer the
structure of the solar atmosphere from observations. The default approach for
computing the radiation field in multidimensional solar radiative transfer
models has long remained the same: a short characteristics, discrete ordinates
method, formal solver. In situations with complex atmospheric structure and
multiple transitions between optically-thick and -thin regimes these solvers
require prohibitively high angular resolution to correctly resolve the
radiation field. Here, we present the theory of radiance cascades, a technique
designed to exploit structure inherent to the radiation field, allowing for
efficient reuse of calculated samples, thus providing a very high-resolution
result at a fraction of the computational cost of existing methods. We
additionally describe our implementation of this method in the DexRT code, and
present initial results of the synthesis of a snapshot of a magnetohydrodynamic
model of a solar prominence formed via levitation-condensation. The approach
presented here provides a credible route for routinely performing
multidimensional radiative transfer calculations free from so-called ray
effects, and scaling high-quality non-LTE models to next-generation
high-performance computing systems with GPU accelerators. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.14425 |