Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS April Meeting 2022
Volume 67, Number 6
Saturday–Tuesday, April 9–12, 2022; New York
Session S17: Poster Session III (2:00-4:00 pm)
2:00 PM,
Monday, April 11, 2022
Room: 9th Floor Terrace
Abstract: S17.00062 : Conservation of Angular Momentum in the Fast Multipole Method*
Presenter:
Hyun Lim
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Authors:
Hyun Lim
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Oleg Korobkin
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Julien Loiseau
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Christopher Mauney
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Irina Sagert
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Alexander Kaltenborn
(Los Alamos National Laboratory and The George Washington University)
Bing-Jyun Tsao
(Los Alamos National Laboratory and The University of Texas at Austin)
Wesley Even
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
This is particularly important for some applications in computational astrophysics, such as binary dynamics, mergers, and accretion of compact objects (neutron stars, black holes, and white dwarfs). However, in astrophysical applications that require the inclusion of gravity, calculating pairwise particle interactions becomes prohibitively expensive.
In the Fast Multipole Method (FMM), they are, therefore, replaced with symmetric interactions between distant clusters of particles (contained in the tree nodes). Although such an algorithm is linear momentum-conserving, it introduces spurious torques that violate conservation of angular momentum. We present a modification of FMM that is free of spurious torques and conserves angular momentum explicitly. The new method has practically no computational overhead compared to the standard FMM. We will demonstrate the performance and accuracy of our new method on a few astrophysical examples
*This work is supported by the LANL ASC Program and LDRD grants 20200145ER and 20190021DR
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