scholarly journals Asynchronous computations for solving the acoustic wave propagation equation

Author(s):  
Kadir Akbudak ◽  
Hatem Ltaief ◽  
Vincent Etienne ◽  
Rached Abdelkhalak ◽  
Thierry Tonellot ◽  
...  

The aim of this study is to design and implement an asynchronous computational scheme for solving the acoustic wave propagation equation with absorbing boundary conditions (ABCs) in the context of seismic imaging applications. While the convolutional perfectly matched layer (CPML) is typically used for ABCs in the oil and gas industry, its formulation further stresses memory accesses and decreases the arithmetic intensity at the physical domain boundaries. The challenges with CPML are twofold: (1) the strong, inherent data dependencies imposed on the explicit time-stepping scheme render asynchronous time integration cumbersome and (2) the idle time is further exacerbated by the load imbalance introduced among processing units. In fact, the CPML formulation of the ABCs requires expensive synchronization points, which may hinder the parallel performance of the overall asynchronous time integration. In particular, when deployed in conjunction with the multicore-optimized wavefront diamond temporal blocking (MWD-TB) approach for the inner domain points, it results in a major performance slow down. To relax CPML’s synchrony and mitigate the resulting load imbalance, we embed CPML’s calculation into MWD-TB’s inner loop and carry on the time integration with fine-grained computations in an asynchronous, holistic way. This comes at the price of storing transient results to alleviate dependencies from critical data hazards while maintaining the numerical accuracy of the original scheme. Performance and scalability results on various x86 architectures demonstrate the superiority of MWD-TB with CPML support against the standard spatial blocking on various grid sizes. To our knowledge, this is the first practical study that highlights the consolidation of CPML ABCs with asynchronous temporal blocking stencil computations.

Geophysics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. T145-T154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junichi Takekawa ◽  
Hitoshi Mikada

We have developed an absorbing boundary condition for acoustic-wave propagation using a mesh-free method without sacrificing the flexibility of the mesh-free framework. When we simulate acoustic-wave propagation using a numerical method, artificial reflections from model edges induced by a truncated computational domain should be avoided. Although many absorbing boundary conditions have been developed, most of them have been based on a regular latticed alignment of grids or nodes, and the efficiency of such absorbing boundary conditions for irregular arrangement of grids or nodes has not been examined yet. We have studied the artificial reflections generated at the boundaries of a model for a mesh-free method, and we have proposed a novel approach for suppressing the artifacts. The method uses a hybrid approach with a transition zone, in which the wavefield is estimated by a weighted average of solutions from the one- and two-way wave equations. Numerical experiments indicate that the proposed method can provide good performance in suppression of the artificial edge reflections even for irregular distributions of calculation points in the vicinity of model edges.


1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Longatte ◽  
P. Lafon ◽  
S. Candel ◽  
E. Longatte ◽  
P. Lafon ◽  
...  

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