Keywords: CNN, Emulator, Astrophysics, Planet Formation
TL;DR: We developed a U-net emulator called Freesbee to accelerate FARGO hydrodynamic simulations of protoplanetary disks, achieving 3% median error compared to high-resolution runs and running at least 10^6 times faster.
Abstract: Hydrodynamic simulations of planets embedded in accretion disks around young stars are an essential tool in the study of planet formation and evolution. However, these simulations are expensive, and any quantitative comparisons between planet-formation theory and the observations of planets will require the execution of at least thousands of simulations. We present a U-net emulator built to accelerate the simulation package FARGO. Our emulator, Freesbee, was pre-trained with disk surface densities from 940 short, low-resolution FARGO simulations and fine-tuned using only 10 to 30 longer and higher-resolution simulations. The emulator takes as input the disk density and embedded planet position from the first few timesteps of a brief simulation and outputs the final state 5,000 dynamical times (years at 1 a.u.) later. The emulated disk densities have median fractional errors (relative to high-resolution FARGO) ranging from 0.9 to 6 percent
with a median value of 3 percent; they are over $10^6$ times faster to compute.
Submission Number: 81
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