This paper introduces the Sheffield Magnetohydrodynamics Algorithm Using GPUs (SMAUG+), an advanced numerical code for solving magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) problems, using multi-GPU systems. Multi-GPU systems facilitate the development of accelerated codes and enable us to investigate larger model sizes and/or more detailed computational domain resolutions. This is a significant advancement over the parent single-GPU MHD code, SMAUG (Griffiths et al., 2015). Here, we demonstrate the validity of the SMAUG + code, describe the parallelisation techniques and investigate performance benchmarks. The initial configuration of the Orszag-Tang vortex simulations are distributed among 4, 16, 64 and 100 GPUs. Furthermore, different simulation box resolut...
We present the newly developed code, GAMER (GPU-accelerated Adaptive MEsh Refinement code), which ha...
In this work we present a proof of concept of CUDA-capable, resistive, multi-fluid models of relativ...
In a Priority Program on Massively Parallel Computing, eight Dutch research groups (http://www.phys....
This paper introduces the Sheffield Magnetohydrodynamics Algorithm Using GPUs (SMAUG+), an advanced ...
Parallelization techniques have been exploited most successfully by the gaming/graphics industry wit...
We describe our experience using NVIDIA's CUDA (Compute Unified Device Architecture) C programming e...
We present the FARGO3D code, recently publicly released. It is a magnetohydrodynamics code developed...
We present HORIZON, a new graphics processing unit (GPU)-accelerated code to solve the equations of ...
Context. The numerical simulation of turbulence and flows in almost ideal, large-Reynolds-number ast...
Context. The numerical simulation of turbulence and flows in almost ideal astrophysical plasmas with...
We present the newly developed code, GPU-accelerated Adaptive-MEsh-Refinement code (GAMER), which ad...
The first part of this paper reviews some issues representing major computational challenges for glo...
Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) studies the dynamics of an electrically conducting fluid under the influe...
We present GRADSPMHD, a completely Lagrangian parallel magnetohydrodynamics code based on the SPH fo...
The large-scale dynamics of plasma flows can often be described within a fluidistic approximation kn...
We present the newly developed code, GAMER (GPU-accelerated Adaptive MEsh Refinement code), which ha...
In this work we present a proof of concept of CUDA-capable, resistive, multi-fluid models of relativ...
In a Priority Program on Massively Parallel Computing, eight Dutch research groups (http://www.phys....
This paper introduces the Sheffield Magnetohydrodynamics Algorithm Using GPUs (SMAUG+), an advanced ...
Parallelization techniques have been exploited most successfully by the gaming/graphics industry wit...
We describe our experience using NVIDIA's CUDA (Compute Unified Device Architecture) C programming e...
We present the FARGO3D code, recently publicly released. It is a magnetohydrodynamics code developed...
We present HORIZON, a new graphics processing unit (GPU)-accelerated code to solve the equations of ...
Context. The numerical simulation of turbulence and flows in almost ideal, large-Reynolds-number ast...
Context. The numerical simulation of turbulence and flows in almost ideal astrophysical plasmas with...
We present the newly developed code, GPU-accelerated Adaptive-MEsh-Refinement code (GAMER), which ad...
The first part of this paper reviews some issues representing major computational challenges for glo...
Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) studies the dynamics of an electrically conducting fluid under the influe...
We present GRADSPMHD, a completely Lagrangian parallel magnetohydrodynamics code based on the SPH fo...
The large-scale dynamics of plasma flows can often be described within a fluidistic approximation kn...
We present the newly developed code, GAMER (GPU-accelerated Adaptive MEsh Refinement code), which ha...
In this work we present a proof of concept of CUDA-capable, resistive, multi-fluid models of relativ...
In a Priority Program on Massively Parallel Computing, eight Dutch research groups (http://www.phys....