4.6 Article

A COMPARISON OF SPECTRAL ELEMENT AND FINITE DIFFERENCE METHODS USING STATICALLY REFINED NONCONFORMING GRIDS FOR THE MHD ISLAND COALESCENCE INSTABILITY PROBLEM

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 177, Issue 2, Pages 613-625

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/588139

Keywords

instabilities; magnetic fields; methods: numerical; MHD; Sun: corona; Sun: magnetic fields

Funding

  1. NSF [AST-0434322, CMG-0327888]

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A recently developed spectral-element adaptive refinement incompressible magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) code is applied to simulate the problem of MHD island coalescence instability (MICI) in two dimensions. MICI is a fundamental MHD process that can produce sharp current layers and subsequent reconnection and heating in a high-Lundquist number plasma such as the solar corona. Because of the formation of thin current layers, it is highly desirable to use adaptively or statically refined grids to resolve them and to maintain accuracy at the same time. The output of the spectral-element static adaptive refinement simulations are compared with simulations using a finite-difference method on the same refinement grids, and both methods are compared to pseudospectral simulations with uniform grids as baselines. It is shown that with the statically refined grids roughly scaling linearly with effective resolution, spectral element runs can maintain accuracy significantly higher than that of the finite-difference runs, in some cases achieving close to full spectral accuracy.

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