Tuesday, July 29, 2014 9:00 am
-
9:00 am
EDT (GMT -04:00)
M3 - 2134
Candidate
Andree Susanto, Applied Math, University of Waterloo
Title
High-Order
Finite-Volume
Schemes
for
Magnetohydrodynamics
Abstract
New
high-order
finite-volume
numerical
schemes
for
the
magnetohydrodynamics
equations
are
proposed
in
two
and
three
dimensions.
Two
different
sets
of
magnetohydrodynamics
equations
are
considered.
The
first
set
is
the
ideal
magnetohydrodynamics
system,
which
assumes
that
the
fluid
can
be
treated
as
a
perfect
conductor.
The
second
set
is
resistive
MHD,
which
involves
non-zero
resistivity.
A
high-order
central
essentially
nonoscillatory
(CENO)
approach
is
employed,
which
combines
unlimited
k-exact
polynomial
reconstruction
with
a
monotonicity
preserving
scheme.
The
CENO
schemes,
which
were
originally
developed
for
compressible
fluid
flow,
are
applied
to
the
MHD
equations,
along
with
two
possible
control
mechanisms
for
divergence
error
of
the
magnetic
field.
The
hyperbolic
fluxes
are
calculated
by
solving
a
Riemann
problem
at
each
cell
interface,
and
elliptic
fluxes
are
computed
through
k-exact
gradient
interpolation
where
point-wise
values
of
the
gradients
are
required.
Smooth
test
problems
and
test
cases
with
discontinuities
(weak
or
strong)
are
considered,
and
convergence
studies
are
presented
for
both
the
ideal
and
resistive
MHD
systems.
Several
potential
space
physics
applications
are
explored.
For
these
simulations,
cubed-sphere
grids
are
used
to
model
the
interaction
of
the
solar
wind
with
planetary
bodies
or
their
satellites.
The
basic
cubed-sphere
grid
discretizes
a
simulation
domain
between
two
concentric
spheres
using
six
root
blocks
(corresponding
to
the
six
faces
of
a
cube).
Conditions
describing
the
atmosphere
of
the
inner
body
can
be
applied
at
the
boundary
of
the
inner
sphere.
For
some
problems
we
also
need
to
solve
equations
within
the
inner
sphere,
for
which
we
develop
a
seven-block
cubed-sphere
grid
where
the
empty
space
inside
the
interior
sphere
is
discretized
as
a
seventh
root
block.
We
consider
lunar
flow
problems
for
which
we
employ
the
seven-block
cubed-sphere
mesh.
Ideal
MHD
is
solved
between
the
inner
and
outer
spheres
of
the
grid,
and
the
magnetic
diffusion
equations
are
solved
within
the
inner
sphere,
which
represents
the
lunar
interior.
Two
cases
are
considered:
one
is
without
intrinsic
magnetic
field,
where
only
a
wake
is
expected
without
any
bow
shock
forming
ahead
of
the
Moon,
and
the
second
is
with
a
small
dipole
moment
to
model
a
lunar
crustal
magnetic
anomaly,
in
which
case
a
small-scale
magnetosphere
is
expected
ahead
of
the
region
with
the
magnetic
anomaly.