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GYRO: A 5-D Gyrokinetic-Maxwell Solver
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Source Conference on High Performance Networking and Computing archive
Proceedings of the 2004 ACM/IEEE conference on Supercomputing table of contents
Page: 26  
Year of Publication: 2004
ISBN:0-7695-2153-3
Authors
Mark R. Fahey  Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Jeff Candy  General Atomics
Sponsor
SIGARCH: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Architecture
Publisher
IEEE Computer Society  Washington, DC, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 5,   Downloads (12 Months): 24,   Citation Count: 4
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DOI Bookmark: 10.1109/SC.2004.27

ABSTRACT

GYRO solves the 5-dimensional gyrokinetic-Maxwell equations in shaped plasma geometry, using either a local (fluxtube) or global radial domain. It has been ported to a variety of modern MPP platforms including a number of commodity clusters, IBM SPs and the Cray X1. We have been able to quickly design and analyze new physics scenarios in record time using the Cray X1: (i) transport barrier studies (Phys. Plasmas 11 (2004) 1879), (ii) the local limit of global simulations (Phys. Plasmas 11 (2004) L25), (iii) kinetic electron and finite-beta generalizations of a community-wide benchmark case, and (iv) impurity transport with application to fuel separation in burning D-T plasmas (to be submitted to Nuclear Fusion). We report on recent physics progress and studies. Further, we discuss GYRO performance across several architectures.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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[1] Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing. http://www.osti.gov/scidac/.
 
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[2] J. Candy and R. Waltz. Anomalous transport in the DIII-D tokamak matched by supercomputer simulation. Phys. Rev. Lett., 91:045001-1, 2003.
 
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[5] J. Candy, R. Waltz, and M. Rosenbluth. Smooothness of turbulent transport across a minimum- q surface. Phys. Plasmas, 11:1879, 2004.
 
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Collaborative Colleagues:
Mark R. Fahey: colleagues
Jeff Candy: colleagues