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Property / author: George Em. Karniadakis / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 19:38, 27 May 2024

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Parallel benchmarks of turbulence in complex geometries
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    Parallel benchmarks of turbulence in complex geometries (English)
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    18 June 1998
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    We present benchmark results from the parallel implementation of the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes solver Prism on different parallel platforms of current interest: IBM SP2 (all three types of processors), SGI Power Challenge XL and Cray C90. The numerical method is based on mixed spectral element-Fourier expansions in \((x-y)\) and \(z\)-directions, respectively. Each one (or a group) of the Fourier modes can be computed on a separate processor as the linear contributions in Navier-Stokes equations (Helmholtz solvers) are completely uncoupled. Coupling is obtained via the nonlinear contributions (advection terms) and requires a global transpose of the data and one-dimensional multiple-point FFTs. We first analyze the computational complexity of Prism identifying basic computational kernels and communication bottlenecks. Next, we define two three-dimensional benchmark flow problems in prototype complex geometries, and measure parallel scalability and performance using different message-passing libraries. Special emphasis is placed on runtime data processing, e.g. turbulence statistics computed during the simulation.
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    Helmholtz solvers
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    three-dimensional Navier-Stokes solver Prism
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    IBM SP2
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    SGI Power Challenge XL
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    Cray C90
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    mixed spectral element-Fourier expansions
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    one-dimensional multiple-point FFTs
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    runtime data processing
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    turbulence statistics
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