Spiral structure emerges in Feedback in Realistic Environments (FIRE) simulation, which modeled stellar feedback on galaxy formation. |
An interstellar mystery of why stars form has been solved thanks to the
most realistic supercomputer simulations of galaxies yet made.
Theoretical astrophysicist Philip Hopkins of the California Institute
of Technology (CalTech) led research that found that stellar activity
-- like supernova explosions or even just starlight -- plays a big part
in the formation of other stars and the growth of galaxies.
"Feedback from stars, the collective effects from supernovae,
radiation, heating, pushing on gas, and stellar winds can regulate the
growth of galaxies and explain why galaxies have turned so little of the
available supply of gas that they have into stars," Hopkins said.
Galaxy simulations were tested on the Stampede supercomputer of the
Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC), an Extreme Science and
Engineering Discovery Environment-allocated (XSEDE) resource funded by
the National Science Foundation.
The initial results were published September of 2014 in the Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Hopkins's work was funded by
the National Science Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation,
and a NASA Einstein Postdoctoral Fellowship.
The mystery begins in interstellar space, the vast space between
stars. There dwell enormous clouds of molecules, mainly hydrogen, with
the mass of thousands or even millions of Suns. These molecular gas
clouds condense and give birth to stars.
What's puzzled astrophysicists since the 1970s is their observations
that only a small fraction of matter in the clouds becomes a star. The
best computer simulations, however, predicted nearly all of a cloud's
matter would cool and become a star.
"That's really what we were trying to figure out and address, for the
first time, by putting in the real physics of what we know stars do to
the gas around them," Hopkins said.
A multi-institution collaboration formed with members from CalTech,
U.C. Berkeley, U.C. San Diego, U.C. Irvine, Northwestern, and the
University of Toronto. They produced a new set of supercomputer galaxy
models called FIRE or Feedback in Realistic Environments. It focused the
computing power on small scales of just a few light years across.
"We started by simulating just single stars in little patches of the
galaxy, where we trace every single explosion," Hopkins explained. "That
lets you build a model that you can put into a simulation of a whole
galaxy at a time. And then you build that up into simulations of a chunk
of the universe at a time."
Hopkins developed the simulation code locally on a cluster at
CalTech, but the Stampede supercomputer did the lion's share of the
computation.
"Almost all of these simulations were run on XSEDE resources,"
Hopkins said. "In particular the Stampede supercomputer at TACC was the
workhorse of these simulations…Stampede was an ideal machine -- it was
fast, it had large shared memory nodes with a lot of processors per node
and good memory per processor. And that let us run this on a much
faster timescale than we had originally anticipated. Combined with
improvements we made to the parallelization of the problem, we were able
to run this problem on thousands of CPUs at a time, which is
record-breaking for this type of problem," Hopkins said.
The realism achieved by the FIRE galaxy simulations surprised
Hopkins. Past work with sub-grid models of how supernovae explode and
how radiation interacts with gas required manually tweaking the model
after each run.
"My real jaw-dropping moment," Hopkins said, "was when we put the
physics that we thought had been missing from the previous models in
without giving ourselves a bunch of nobs to turn. We ran it and it
actually looked like a real galaxy. And it only had a few percent of
material that turned into stars, instead of all of it, as in the past."
FIRE has mostly simulated the more typical and small galaxies, and
Hopkins wants to build on its success. "We want to explore the odd
balls, the galaxies that we see that are of strange sizes or masses or
have unusual properties in some other way," Hopkins said.
Hopkins also wants to model galaxies with supermassive black holes at
the center, like our own Milky Way. "In the process of falling in,
before matter actually gets trapped by the black hole and nothing can
escape, it turns out that for the most massive galaxies, this is even
more energy than released by all the stars in the galaxy. It's almost
certainly important. But it's at the edge, and we're just starting to
think about simulating those giant galaxies," Hopkins said.
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