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It is well known that numerical errors grow exponentially in $N$-body simulations of gravitational bound stellar systems, but it is not well understood how the accuracy parameters of algorithms affect the physical evolution in simulations. By using the hybrid $N$-body code, PeTar, we investigate how escapers and the structure evolution of collisional stellar systems (e.g., star clusters) depend on the accuracy of long-range and short-range interactions. We study a group of simulations of ideal low-mass star clusters in which the accuracy parameters are varied. We find that although the number of escapers is different in individual simulations, its distribution from all simulations can be described by Poisson statistics. The density profile also has a similar feature. By using a self-consistent set-up of the accuracy parameters for long- and short-range interactions, such that orbits are resolved well enough, the physical evolution of the models is identical. But when the short-range accuracy is too low, a nonphysical dynamical evolution can easily occur; this is not the case for long-range interactions. This strengthens the need to include a proper algorithm (e.g. regularization methods) in the realistic modelling of collisional stellar systems. We also demonstrate that energy-conservation is not a good indicator to monitor the quality of the simulations. The energy error of the system is controlled by the hardest binary, and thus, it may not reflect the ensemble error of the global system.
This project aims at exploiting the wide-field and limiting-magnitude capabilities of the LSST to fully characterise the resolved stellar populations in/around six Local Group stellar systems of different morphological type at ~30 to ~400 kpc distanc
Under certain rather prevalent conditions (driven by dynamical orbital evolution), a hierarchical triple stellar system can be well approximated, from the standpoint of orbital parameter estimation, as two binary star systems combined. Even under thi
Understanding the collapse of clouds and the formation of protoplanetary disks is essential to understanding the formation of stars and planets. Infall and accretion, the mass-aggregation processes that occur at envelope and disk scales, drive the dy
Bow shocks and related density enhancements produced by the winds of massive stars moving through the interstellar medium provide important information regarding the motions of the stars, the properties of their stellar winds, and the characteristics
To study the quality of stellar spectra of the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST) and the correctness of the corresponding stellar parameters derived by the LASP (LAMOST Stellar Parameter Pipeline), the outlier analysi