Title :
0.374 Pflop/s trillion-particle kinetic modeling of laser plasma interaction on roadrunner
Author :
Bowers, K.J. ; Albright, B.J. ; Bergen, B. ; Yin, L. ; Barker, K.J. ; Kerbyson, D.J.
Author_Institution :
Appl. Phys. Div., Los Alamos Nat. Lab., Los Alamos, NM, USA
Abstract :
We demonstrate the outstanding performance and scalability of the VPIC kinetic plasma modeling code on the heterogeneous IBM Roadrunner supercomputer at Los Alamos National Laboratory. VPIC is a three-dimensional, relativistic, electromagnetic, particle-in-cell (PIC) code that self-consistently evolves a kinetic plasma. VPIC simulations of laser plasma interaction were conducted at unprecedented fidelity and scale-up to 1.0 times 1012 particles on as many as 136 times 106 voxels-to model accurately the particle trapping physics occurring within a laser-driven hohlraum in an inertial confinement fusion experiment. During a parameter study of laser reflectivity as a function of laser intensity under experimentally realizable hohlraum conditions, we measured sustained performance exceeding 0.374 Pflop/s (s.p.) with the inner loop itself achieving 0.488 Pflop/s (s.p.). Given the increasing importance of data motion limitations, it is notable that this was measured in a PIC calculation-a technique that typically requires more data motion per computation than other techniques (such as dense matrix calculations, molecular dynamics N-body calculations and Monte-Carlo calculations) often used to demonstrate supercomputer performance. This capability opens up the exciting possibility of using VPIC to model, from first-principles, an issue critical to the success of the multi-billion dollar DOE/NNSA National Ignition Facility.
Keywords :
laser fusion; parallel machines; physics computing; plasma kinetic theory; plasma simulation; DOE/NNSA National Ignition Facility; IBM Roadrunner supercomputer; Los Alamos National Laboratory; VPIC kinetic plasma modeling code; VPIC simulation; electromagnetic particle-in-cell code; inertial confinement fusion experiment; laser plasma interaction; laser reflectivity; laser-driven hohlraum; particle trapping physics; trillion-particle kinetic modeling; Kinetic theory; Laboratories; Laser fusion; Laser modes; Laser theory; Physics; Plasma confinement; Plasma simulation; Scalability; Supercomputers; heterogeneous architecture; high performance computing; inertial confinement fusion; laser plasma instability; memory management; particle in cell; petaflop;
Conference_Titel :
High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis, 2008. SC 2008. International Conference for
Conference_Location :
Austin, TX
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2834-2
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2835-9
DOI :
10.1109/SC.2008.5222734