DocumentCode :
3298841
Title :
Adaptive Parallel Computation of a Grand-Challenge Problem: Prediction of the Path of a Solar-Corona Mass Ejection
Author :
Stout, Quentin F. ; de Zeeuw, Darren L. ; Gombosi, Tamas I. ; Groth, Clinton P T ; Marshall, Hal G. ; Powell, Kenneth G.
Author_Institution :
The University of Michigan
fYear :
1998
fDate :
07-13 Nov. 1998
Firstpage :
8
Lastpage :
8
Abstract :
One of the ways that the Sun interacts with the Earth is through the solar wind, which is an ionized multi-component fluid that emanates from the Sun and travels radially outward at hundreds of kilometers per second. Solar-wind transients, such as Coronal Mass Ejections (CME´s), can be particularly important. In rare cases, CME´s have affected the lower atmosphere of the Earth, causing regional power-grid failures. More regularly, CME´s pose threats to satellites and spacecraft. Due to the extreme range of temporal and spatial scales involved in solar-wind phenomena, it had previously been impossible to predict CME propagation to Earth with faster-than-real-time, well-resolved calculations. Our team has now developed a highly scalable solution-adaptive scheme for predicting CME propagation. The solution-adaptive technique is an adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) scheme for magneto- hydrodynamic (MHD) calculations. The physical domain is decomposed into three- dimensional blocks, where each block forms a regular grid. In regions of relatively high gradients, blocks are successively refined. Blocks are distributed to processors, with communication between neighboring blocks is handled by asynchronous message passing. The benchmark calculation achieved 212 Gflops on a 1024-processor Cray T3E-1200, with the grid adapting over the course of the calculation from 2048 blocks to 11,729 blocks, where each block was composed of 10x10x10 cells. On a 512-processor Cray T3E-600, our benchmark simulations were performed 16 times faster than real time.
Keywords :
Riemann solver; adaptive blocks; adaptive mesh refinement (AMR); coronal; heliospheric plasma; hyperbolic PDEs; magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD); space weather prediction; upwind methods; Adaptive mesh refinement; Atmosphere; Concurrent computing; Earth; Hydrodynamics; Magnetic domains; Magnetohydrodynamics; Satellites; Space vehicles; Sun; Riemann solver; adaptive blocks; adaptive mesh refinement (AMR); coronal; heliospheric plasma; hyperbolic PDEs; magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD); space weather prediction; upwind methods;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Supercomputing, 1998.SC98. IEEE/ACM Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-8707-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SC.1998.10019
Filename :
1437295
Link To Document :
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