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Thermal dust emission carries information on physical conditions and dust properties in many astronomical sources. Because observations represent a sum of emission along the line of sight, their interpretation often requires radiative transfer modelling. We describe a new radiative transfer program SOC for computations of dust emission and examine its performance in simulations of interstellar clouds with external and internal heating. SOC implements the Monte Carlo radiative transfer method as a parallel program for shared memory computers. It can be used to study dust extinction, scattering, and emission. We tested SOC with realistic cloud models and examined the convergence and noise of the dust temperature estimates and of the resulting surface brightness maps. SOC has been demonstrated to produces accurate estimates for dust scattering and for thermal dust emission. It performs well with both with CPUs and with GPUs, the latter providing up to an order of magnitude speed-up. In the test cases, ALI improved the convergence rates but also was sensitive to Monte Carlo noise. Run-time refinement of the hierarchical-grid models did not help in reducing the run times required for a given accuracy of solution. The use of a reference field, without ALI, works more robustly. It also allows the run time to be optimised if the number of photon packages is increased only as the iterations progress. The use of GPUs in radiative transfer computations should be investigated further.
Radiative transfer modelling is part of many astrophysical simulations and is used to make synthetic observations and to assist analysis of observations. We concentrate on the modelling of the radio lines emitted by the interstellar medium. In connec
HYPERION is a new three-dimensional dust continuum Monte-Carlo radiative transfer code that is designed to be as generic as possible, allowing radiative transfer to be computed through a variety of three-dimensional grids. The main part of the code i
We present Powderday, a flexible, fast, open-source dust radiative transfer package designed to interface with galaxy formation simulations. Powderday builds on FSPS population synthesis models, Hyperion dust radiative transfer, and employs yt to int
We present a novel Lyman alpha (Ly$alpha$) radiative transfer code, SEURAT, where line scatterings are solved adaptively with the resolution of the smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH). The radiative transfer method implemented in SEURAT is based on
A one-dimensional method for reconstructing the structure of prestellar and protostellar clouds is presented. The method is based on radiative transfer computations and a comparison of theoretical and observed intensity distributions at both millimet