http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.03804
We introduce Mahakala, a Python-based, modular, radiative ray-tracing code for curved space-times. We employ Google’s JAX framework for accelerated automatic differentiation, which can efficiently compute Christoffel symbols directly from the metric, allowing the user to easily and quickly simulate photon trajectories through non-Kerr metrics. JAX also enables Mahakala to run in parallel on both CPUs and GPUs and achieve speeds comparable to C-based codes. Mahakala natively uses the Cartesian Kerr-Schild coordinate system, which avoids numerical issues caused by the “pole” of spherical coordinates. We demonstrate Mahakala’s capabilities by simulating the 1.3 mm wavelength images (the wavelength of Event Horizon Telescope observations) of general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of low-accretion rate supermassive black holes. The modular nature of Mahakala allows us to easily quantify the relative contribution of different regions of the flow to image features. We show that most of the emission seen in 1.3 mm images originates close to the black hole. We also quantify the relative contribution of the disk, forward jet, and counter jet to 1.3 mm images.
A. Sharma, L. Medeiros, C. Chan, et. al.
Tue, 11 Apr 23
33/63
Comments: 15 pages, 11 figures
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