Braginskii-MHD simulations of sloshing cluster cores show that pressure-anisotropy limiters plus turbulent magnetic structure reduce effective viscosity far below the Spitzer value, steepening velocity spectra and dissipating a small fraction of turbulent kinetic energy.
Preserving Monotonicity in Anisotropic Diffusion
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abstract
We show that standard algorithms for anisotropic diffusion based on centered differencing (including the recent symmetric algorithm) do not preserve monotonicity. In the context of anisotropic thermal conduction, this can lead to the violation of the entropy constraints of the second law of thermodynamics, causing heat to flow from regions of lower temperature to higher temperature. In regions of large temperature variations, this can cause the temperature to become negative. Test cases to illustrate this for centered asymmetric and symmetric differencing are presented. Algorithms based on slope limiters, analogous to those used in second order schemes for hyperbolic equations, are proposed to fix these problems. While centered algorithms may be good for many cases, the main advantage of limited methods is that they are guaranteed to avoid negative temperature (which can cause numerical instabilities) in the presence of large temperature gradients. In particular, limited methods will be useful to simulate hot, dilute astrophysical plasmas where conduction is anisotropic and the temperature gradients are enormous, e.g., collisionless shocks and disk-corona interface.
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astro-ph.GA 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Reduced Effective Viscosity from Anisotropic Transport and Plasma Instabilities in the Sloshing Cores of Galaxy Clusters
Braginskii-MHD simulations of sloshing cluster cores show that pressure-anisotropy limiters plus turbulent magnetic structure reduce effective viscosity far below the Spitzer value, steepening velocity spectra and dissipating a small fraction of turbulent kinetic energy.