DocumentCode :
3429950
Title :
Forward and adjoint simulations of seismic wave propagation on emerging large-scale GPU architectures
Author :
Rietmann, M. ; Messmer, P. ; Nissen-Meyer, T. ; Peter, D. ; Basini, P. ; Komatitsch, D. ; Schenk, Olaf ; Tromp, J. ; Boschi, L. ; Giardini, D.
Author_Institution :
USI Lugan, Inst. of Comput. Sci., Lugano, Switzerland
fYear :
2012
fDate :
10-16 Nov. 2012
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
11
Abstract :
Computational seismology is an area of wide sociological and economic impact, ranging from earthquake risk assessment to subsurface imaging and oil and gas exploration. At the core of these simulations is the modeling of wave propagation in a complex medium. Here we report on the extension of the high-order finite-element seismic wave simulation package SPECFEM3D to support the largest scale hybrid and homogeneous supercomputers. Starting from an existing highly tuned MPI code, we migrated to a CUDA version. In order to be of immediate impact to the science mission of computational seismologists, we had to port the entire production package, rather than just individual kernels. One of the challenges in parallelizing finite element codes is the potential for race conditions during the assembly phase. We therefore investigated different methods such as mesh coloring or atomic updates on the GPU. In order to achieve strong scaling, we needed to ensure good overlap of data motion at all levels, including internode and host-accelerator transfers. Finally we carefully tuned the GPU implementation. The new MPI/CUDA solver exhibits excellent scalability and achieves speedup on a node-to-node basis over the carefully tuned equivalent multi-core MPI solver. To demonstrate the performance of both the forward and adjoint functionality, we present two case studies run on the Cray XE6 CPU and Cray XK6 GPU architectures up to 896 nodes: (1) focusing on most commonly used forward simulations, we simulate seismic wave propagation generated by earthquakes in Turkey, and (2) testing the most complex seismic inversion type of the package, we use ambient seismic noise to image 3-D crust and mantle structure beneath western Europe.
Keywords :
finite element analysis; geophysics computing; graphics processing units; message passing; multiprocessing systems; parallel architectures; seismic waves; 3D crust; CUDA solver; CUDA version; Cray XK6 GPU architecture; MPI code; SPECFEM3D; ambient seismic noise; atomic update; computational seismology; earthquake risk assessment; economic impact; finite element code; finite-element seismic wave simulation; gas exploration; host-accelerator transfer; internode transfer; large-scale GPU architecture; mantle structure; mesh coloring; multicore MPI solver; oil exploration; seismic inversion type; seismic wave propagation; sociological impact; subsurface imaging; supercomputer; Color; Computational modeling; Earthquakes; Graphics processing units; Optimization; Propagation; Seismic waves;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC), 2012 International Conference for
Conference_Location :
Salt Lake City, UT
ISSN :
2167-4329
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0805-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SC.2012.59
Filename :
6468543
Link To Document :
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