High Performance Computing in Science and Engineering '99
[Book]
Transactions of the High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS) 1999 /
edited by Egon Krause, Willi Jäger.
Berlin, Heidelberg :
Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
2000.
Physics -- Finite difference modelling of elastic wave propagation in the Earth's uppermost mantle -- Direct Simulation of Seismic Wave Propagation -- Summary of Project 11172 -- Development and Astrophysical Applications of a Parallel Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics Code with MPI -- Collisional dynamics around black hole binaries in galactic centres -- IMD - A Massively Parallel Molecular Dynamics Package for Classical Simulations in Condensed Matter Physics -- Symmetrie diblock copolymers confined into thin films: A Monte Carlo investigation on the CRAY T3E -- Molecular Dynamics of Covalent Crystals -- Simulation of random copolymers at selective interfaces and of cross-linked polymer blends -- Towards the Limits of present-day Supercomputers: Exact Diagonalization of Strongly Correlated Electron-Phonon Systems -- The Metal-Insulator Transition in the Hubbard Model -- Vibronic studies of adsorbate-covered semiconductor surfaces with the help of HPC -- Computational Methods in Chemistry and Molecular Biology -- The multi-reference configuration interaction method on massively parallel architectures -- Quantum Chemical Studies on Heterocyclic Rearrangements in Benzofuroxans: Reaction Paths, Vibrational Spectra, and Rate Constants -- High Level Quantum-Chemical Computations on the Cyclizations of Enyne Allenes -- MD Simulation of a Phospholipid Bilayer -- Three-Dimensional Organization of Chromosome Territories and the Human Cell Nucleus -- Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) -- Parallel Computation of Interface Dynamics in Incompressible Two-Phase Flows -- Numerical Simulation of Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer in an Industrial Czochralski Melt Using a Parallel-Vector Supercomputer -- Numerical flow simulation in cylindrical geometries -- DNS of Laminar-Turbulent Transition in Separation Bubbles -- Numerical Simulation of Supersonic Hydrogen-Air Combustion -- Computation of Turbulent Flows with Separation by Coherent Structure Capturing -- Large Eddy Simulation of the Flow around a Circular Cylinder -- Direct Numerical Simulations of an Adverse Pressure Gradient Turbulent Boundary Layer on High Performance Computers -- Aeroelastic Analysis of a Helicopter Rotor in Forward Flight -- Flow with chemical reaction -- Investigation of Chemistry-Turbulence Interactions Using DNS on the Cray T3E -- Multigrid Convergence Acceleration for Non-Reactive and Reactive Flows -- Quasi-Particles in a Three-Dimensional Three-Component Reaction-Diffusion System -- Upwind Relaxation Algorithm for Re-entry Nonequilibrium Flows -- 3D Simulation of instationary turbulent flow and combustion in internal combustion engines -- Numerical prediction of load changes in a coal-fired utility boiler -- Structural Mechanics and Electrical Engineering -- Design and Application of Object Oriented Parallel Data Structures in Particle and Continuous Systems -- Computation of Electromagnetic Fields by the Method of Moments on the CRAY T3E: Iterative Solution Techniques and Large Scale Applications -- Numerical Treatment of Time Varying Magnetic Fields in Power Transformers by Using the Boundary Element Method (BEM) -- Direct and Inverse Electromagnetic Scattering -- Computer Science -- Fine-Grained Multithreading on the Cray T3E -- ParGrad System: Dynamical Adaptation of the Parallelism Degree of Programs on Cray T3E -- Comparative Measurements of the Solution of PDE's on the PARAGON and the SB-PRAM -- KaHPF: Compiler generated Data Prefetching for HPF -- A Parallel Object Oriented Framework for Particle Methods -- Parallel solution of Partial Differential Equations with Adaptive Multigrid Methods on Unstructured Grids -- Coupling and Parallelization of Grid-based Numerical Simulation Software.
0
The book contains reports about the most significant projects from science and engineering of the Federal High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS). They were carefully selected in a peer-review process and are showcases of an innovative combination of state-of-the-art modeling, novel algorithms and the use of leading-edge parallel computer technology. The projects of HLRS are using supercomputer systems operated jointly by university and industry and therefore a special emphasis has been put on the industrial relevance of results and methods.