[mesa-users] Fwd: 35Cl and K39
Roni Waldman
roni181066 at gmail.com
Mon Jun 4 15:30:22 EDT 2012
Hi Dave,
I begin to understand the network problem.
I’ve also experimented in MESA with a network devised with the help of Jim Truran for SN explosive burning (attached).
In this case I got stuck with an excess of Si30, S34 and so on. Do you have an idea why?
Why exactly is mixing a problem, wouldn’t mesa automatically do the mixing for all species in the set? Or is it just a matter of time consumption?
For my interest, do you have a list of species and reactions for the 81 and 177 networks that you can send me?
Roni
From: David Arnett [mailto:wdarnett at gmail.com]
Sent: יום ב 04 יוני 2012 22:02
To: Bill Paxton; mesa-users at lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: [mesa-users] Fwd: 35Cl and K39
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Arnett <wdarnett at gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 12:00 PM
Subject: Re: 35Cl and K39
To: Roni Waldman <roni181066 at gmail.com>
Hi Roni,
On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 11:38 AM, Roni Waldman <roni181066 at gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Dave,
I used the ns_he.net which was provided with MESA.
Thanks. It sounded familiar.
I just naively supposed it has been tested by someone who devised it.
It certainly has been tested (Bill Paxton is good and careful), but maybe not for your problem.
I attach a file containing the list of nuclei and reactions in the net.
Let me clarify, if you are saying that for Si burning you need ~60 isotopes, then do you mean that the approx21 network which is standard in MESA (see attached file) is also wrong?
Yes, in general. No, if you are doing the problem it was devised for.
It was my understanding that it is possible to devise small effective networks which give the energy production correctly, without getting stuck into an unrealistic composition.
This is an art rather than a science. The network you sent, ns_he.txt,
will have trouble if the neutron excess deviates much from .002 because you have no Si30 or S34, which sop up extra neutrons. If they are missing, these neutrons glom onto CL35 and K39, which have an extra neutron (Z=17,N=18, e.g.). Because odd Z elements are rare, this gives a big effect in the ELEMENTAL abundance.
However, the energy generation is probably well represented because the binding energy of these nuclei is about the same as those omitted :-)
In TYCHO, my default was 81 nuclei, a compromise which got the elemental abundances about right. I am using 177 for core collapse.
I am working with Bill and the MESA team to implement a large network
option in MESA. The problem is getting the mixing right, which is not now done by anyone. Bill has a version that puts the network inside the Henyey sweep, but it becomes slow for reasonable networks. I have a big network, but my coupling of "chemistry", that is, burning and evolution is operator split.
I hope this helps.
Dave
Am I wrong?
Thanks for your help.
Roni
From: David Arnett [mailto:wdarnett at gmail.com]
Sent: יום ב 04 יוני 2012 20:21
To: roni181066 at gmail.com
Subject: 35Cl and K39
Hi Roni,
It depends on your network (which was removed from the email post, so I can't see it). How may nuclei do you have? For Si burning you need ~60
as a rule, to get the quasi-equilibrium right. With fewer, mass goes to strange places because of constraints on charge and nucleon number.
Maybe you should send more info offline.
Dave
--
David Arnett
Regents Professor
Steward Observatory
University of Arizona
--
David Arnett
Regents Professor
Steward Observatory
University of Arizona
--
David Arnett
Regents Professor
Steward Observatory
University of Arizona
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