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General Purpose Ray Tracing and Polarized Radiative Transfer in General Relativity

Authors :
Pihajoki, Pauli
Mannerkoski, Matias
Nattila, Joonas
Johansson, Peter H.
Pihajoki, Pauli
Mannerkoski, Matias
Nattila, Joonas
Johansson, Peter H.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Ray tracing is a central tool for constructing mock observations of compact object emission and for comparing physical emission models with observations. We present ARCMANCER, a publicly available general ray-tracing and tensor algebra library, written in C++ and providing a Python interface. ARCMANCER supports Riemannian and semi-Riemannian spaces of any dimension and metric, and has novel features such as support for multiple simultaneous coordinate charts, embedded geometric shapes, local coordinate systems, and automatic parallel propagation. The ARCMANCER interface is extensively documented and user friendly. While these capabilities make the library well suited for a large variety of problems in numerical geometry, the main focus of this paper is in general relativistic polarized radiative transfer. The accuracy of the code is demonstrated in several code tests and in a comparison with GRTRANS, an existing ray-tracing code. We then use the library in several scenarios as a way to showcase the wide applicability of the code. We study a thin variable-geometry accretion disk model and find that polarization carries information of the inner disk opening angle. Next, we study rotating neutron stars and determine that to obtain polarized light curves at better than a similar to 1% level of accuracy, the rotation needs to be taken into account both in the spacetime metric and in the shape of the star. Finally, we investigate the observational signatures of an accreting black hole lensed by an orbiting black hole. We find that these systems exhibit a characteristic asymmetric twin-peak profile both in flux and polarization properties.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234888001
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.1538-4357.aacea0