Measuring the Numerical Viscosity in Simulations of Protoplanetary Disks in Cartesian Grids -- The Viscously Spreading Ring Revisited
Abstract
Hydrodynamical simulations solve the governing equations on a discrete grid of space and time. This discretization causes numerical diffusion similar to a physical viscous diffusion, whose magnitude is often unknown or poorly constrained. With the current trend of simulating accretion disks with no or very low prescribed physical viscosity, it becomes essential to understand and quantify this inherent numerical diffusion, in the form of a numerical viscosity. We study the behavior of the viscous spreading ring and the spiral instability that develops in it. We then use this setup to quantify the numerical viscosity in Cartesian grids and study its properties. We simulate the viscous spreading ring and the related instability on a two-dimensional polar grid using PLUTO as well as FARGO, and ensure convergence of our results with a resolution study. We then repeat our models on a Cartesian grid and measure the numerical viscosity by comparing results to the known analytical solution, using PLUTO and Athena++. We find that the numerical viscosity in a Cartesian grid scales with resolution as approximately num x2 and is equivalent to an effective α10-4 for a common numerical setup. We also show that the spiral instability manifests as a single leading spiral throughout the whole domain on polar grids. This is contrary to previous results and indicates that sufficient resolution is necessary in order to correctly resolve the instability. Our results are relevant in the context of models where the origin should be included in the computational domain, or when polar grids cannot be used. Examples of such cases include models of disk accretion onto a central binary and inherently Cartesian codes.
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