Bill Paxton
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics
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Featured researches published by Bill Paxton.
Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2011
Bill Paxton; Lars Bildsten; Aaron Dotter; Falk Herwig; Pierre Lesaffre; Frank Timmes
Stellar physics and evolution calculations enable a broad range of research in astrophysics. Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) is a suite of open source, robust, efficient, thread-safe libraries for a wide range of applications in computational stellar astrophysics. A one-dimensional stellar evolution module, MESAstar, combines many of the numerical and physics modules for simulations of a wide range of stellar evolution scenarios ranging from very low mass to massive stars, including advanced evolutionary phases. MESAstar solves the fully coupled structure and composition equations simultaneously. It uses adaptive mesh refinement and sophisticated timestep controls, and supports shared memory parallelism based on OpenMP. State-of-the-art modules provide equation of state, opacity, nuclear reaction rates, element diffusion data, and atmosphere boundary conditions. Each module is constructed as a separate Fortran 95 library with its own explicitly defined public interface to facilitate independent development. Several detailed examples indicate the extensive verification and testing that is continuously performed and demonstrate the wide range of capabilities that MESA possesses. These examples include evolutionary tracks of very low mass stars, brown dwarfs, and gas giant planets to very old ages; the complete evolutionary track of a 1 M ☉ star from the pre-main sequence (PMS) to a cooling white dwarf; the solar sound speed profile; the evolution of intermediate-mass stars through the He-core burning phase and thermal pulses on the He-shell burning asymptotic giant branch phase; the interior structure of slowly pulsating B Stars and Beta Cepheids; the complete evolutionary tracks of massive stars from the PMS to the onset of core collapse; mass transfer from stars undergoing Roche lobe overflow; and the evolution of helium accretion onto a neutron star. MESA can be downloaded from the project Web site (http://mesa.sourceforge.net/).
Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2013
Bill Paxton; Matteo Cantiello; Phil Arras; Lars Bildsten; Edward F. Brown; Aaron Dotter; Christopher Mankovich; M. H. Montgomery; D. Stello; Frank Timmes; R. H. D. Townsend
We substantially update the capabilities of the open source software package Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA), and its one-dimensional stellar evolution module, MESA star. Improvements in MESA stars ability to model the evolution of giant planets now extends its applicability down to masses as low as one-tenth that of Jupiter. The dramatic improvement in asteroseismology enabled by the space-based Kepler and CoRoT missions motivates our full coupling of the ADIPLS adiabatic pulsation code with MESA star. This also motivates a numerical recasting of the Ledoux criterion that is more easily implemented when many nuclei are present at non-negligible abundances. This impacts the way in which MESA star calculates semi-convective and thermohaline mixing. We exhibit the evolution of 3-8 M ? stars through the end of core He burning, the onset of He thermal pulses, and arrival on the white dwarf cooling sequence. We implement diffusion of angular momentum and chemical abundances that enable calculations of rotating-star models, which we compare thoroughly with earlier work. We introduce a new treatment of radiation-dominated envelopes that allows the uninterrupted evolution of massive stars to core collapse. This enables the generation of new sets of supernovae, long gamma-ray burst, and pair-instability progenitor models. We substantially modify the way in which MESA star solves the fully coupled stellar structure and composition equations, and we show how this has improved the scaling of MESAs calculational speed on multi-core processors. Updates to the modules for equation of state, opacity, nuclear reaction rates, and atmospheric boundary conditions are also provided. We describe the MESA Software Development Kit that packages all the required components needed to form a unified, maintained, and well-validated build environment for MESA. We also highlight a few tools developed by the community for rapid visualization of MESA star results.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Jieun Choi; Aaron Dotter; Charlie Conroy; Matteo Cantiello; Bill Paxton; Benjamin D. Johnson
This is the first of a series of papers presenting the Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) Isochrones and Stellar Tracks (MIST) project, a new comprehensive set of stellar evolutionary tracks and isochrones computed using MESA, a state-of-the-art open-source 1D stellar evolution package. In this work, we present models with solar-scaled abundance ratios covering a wide range of ages (
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
D. Stello; Daniel Huber; Timothy R. Bedding; O. Benomar; Lars Bildsten; Y. Elsworth; Ronald L. Gilliland; Benoit Mosser; Bill Paxton; T. R. White
5 \leq \rm \log(Age)\;[yr] \leq 10.3
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011
Orsola De Marco; Jean-Claude Passy; Maxwell Moe; Falk Herwig; Mordecai-Mark Mac Low; Bill Paxton
), masses (
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
William M. Wolf; Lars Bildsten; Jared Brooks; Bill Paxton
0.1 \leq M/M_{\odot} \leq 300
The Astrophysical Journal | 2008
Eric Pfahl; Phil Arras; Bill Paxton
), and metallicities (
The Astrophysical Journal | 2006
Nikku Madhusudhan; Stephen Justham; L. A. Nelson; Bill Paxton; E. Pfahl; Ph. Podsiadlowski; Saul Rappaport
-2.0 \leq \rm [Z/H] \leq 0.5
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Pavel A. Denissenkov; Falk Herwig; Lars Bildsten; Bill Paxton
). The models are self-consistently and continuously evolved from the pre-main sequence to the end of hydrogen burning, the white dwarf cooling sequence, or the end of carbon burning, depending on the initial mass. We also provide a grid of models evolved from the pre-main sequence to the end of core helium burning for
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015
Pavel A. Denissenkov; Don A. Vandenberg; F. D. A. Hartwick; Falk Herwig; A. Weiss; Bill Paxton
-4.0 \leq \rm [Z/H] < -2.0