721,213 research outputs found

    Application and support for high-performance simulation

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    types: Editorial CommentHigh performance simulation that supports sophisticated simulation experimentation and optimization can require non-trivial amounts of computing power. Advanced distributed computing techniques and systems found in areas such as High Performance Computing (HPC), High Throughput Computing (HTC), grid computing, cloud computing and e-Infrastructures are needed to provide effectively the computing power needed for the high performance simulation of large and complex models. In simulation there has been a long tradition of translating and adopting advances in distributed computing as shown by contributions from the parallel and distributed simulation community. This special issue brings together a contemporary collection of work showcasing original research in the advancement of simulation theory and practice with distributed computing. This special issue is divided into two parts. This first part focuses on research pertaining to high performance simulation that support a range of applications including the study of epidemics, social networks, urban mobility and real-time embedded and cyber-physical systems. Compared to other simulation techniques agent-based modeling and simulation is relatively new; however, it is increasingly being used to study large-scale problems. Agent-based simulations present challenges for high performance simulation as they can be complex and computationally demanding, and it is therefore not surprising that this special issue includes several articles on the high performance simulation of such systems.Research Councils U

    Formulation Design and Optimization of High-Performance Concrete for Enhanced Properties

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    High-performance concrete, as a crucial construction material, finds extensive applications in critical engineering projects. This paper focuses on the formulation design and optimization of high-performance concrete. By analyzing the impact of different admixtures, additives, and mix proportions on concrete properties, the methods for enhancing concrete strength, durability, and crack resistance are explored. The study integrates experimental and simulation approaches to provide theoretical and practical support for the reliable application of high-performance concrete

    Simulating Batch and Application Level Scheduling Using GridSim and SimGrid

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    Modern high performance computing (HPC) sys- tems are increasing in the complexity of their design and in the levels of parallelism they offer. Studying and enhancing scheduling in HPC became very interesting for two main as- pects. First, scheduling decisions are taken by different types of schedulers such as batch, application, process, and thread schedulers. Second, simulation has become an important tool to examine the design of HPC systems. Therefore, in this work, we study the simulation of different scheduling levels. We used two well-known simulation toolkits, SimGrid and GridSim, in order to support two different scheduling levels, batch and application level scheduling. Each toolkit is extended to support both levels. Moreover, three different scheduling algorithms for each level are implemented and their performance is examined through a real workload dataset. Finally, a comparison for the extension challenges of the two simulators is conducted

    Evaluation study of IEEE 1609.4 performance for safety and non-safety messages dissemination

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    The IEEE 1609.4 was developed to support multi-channel operation and channel switching procedure in order to provide both safety and non-safety vehicular applications. However, this protocol has some drawback because it does not make efficient usage of channel bandwidth resources for single radio WAVE devices and suffer from high bounded delay and lost packet especially for large-scale networks in terms of the number of active nodes. This paper evaluates IEEE 1609.4 multi-channel protocol performance for safety and non-safety application and compare it with the IEEE 802.11p single channel protocol. Multi-channel and single channel protocols are analyzed in different environments to investigate their performance. By relying on a realistic dataset and using OMNeT++ simulation tool as network simulator, SUMO as traffic simulator and coupling them by employing Veins framework. Performance evaluation results show that the delay of single channel protocol IEEE 802.11p has been degraded 36% compared with multi-channel protocol

    Testing the simplifying assumption in high-dimensional vine copulas

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    Testing the simplifying assumption in high-dimensional vine copulas is a difficult task. Tests must be based on estimated observations and amount to checking constraints on high-dimensional distributions. So far, corresponding tests have been limited to single conditional copulas with a low-dimensional set of conditioning variables. We propose a novel testing procedure that is computationally feasible for high-dimensional data sets and that exhibits a power that decreases only slightly with the dimension. By discretizing the support of the conditioning variables and incorporating a penalty in the test statistic, we mitigate the curse of dimensions by looking for the possibly strongest deviation from the simplifying assumption. The use of a decision tree renders the test computationally feasible for large dimensions. We derive the asymptotic distribution of the test and analyze its finite sample performance in an extensive simulation study. The utility of the test is demonstrated by its application to six data sets with up to 49 dimensions

    A Mathematical Model for Vertical Attitude Takeoff and Landing (VATOL) Aircraft Simulation

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    A mathematical model of a high performance airplane capable of vertical attitude takeoff and landing (VATOL) was developed. An off line digital simulation program incorporating this model was developed to provide trim conditions and dynamic check runs for the piloted simulation studies and support dynamic analyses of proposed VATOL configuration and flight control concepts. Development details for the various simulation component models and the application of the off line simulation program, Vertical Attitude Take-Off and Landing Simulation (VATLAS), to develop a baseline control system for the Vought SF-121 VATOL airplane concept are described

    Mixing multi-core CPUs and GPUs for scientific simulation software

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    Recent technological and economic developments have led to widespread availability of multi-core CPUs and specialist accelerator processors such as graphical processing units (GPUs). The accelerated computational performance possible from these devices can be very high for some applications paradigms. Software languages and systems such as NVIDIA's CUDA and Khronos consortium's open compute language (OpenCL) support a number of individual parallel application programming paradigms. To scale up the performance of some complex systems simulations, a hybrid of multi-core CPUs for coarse-grained parallelism and very many core GPUs for data parallelism is necessary. We describe our use of hybrid applica- tions using threading approaches and multi-core CPUs to control independent GPU devices. We present speed-up data and discuss multi-threading software issues for the applications level programmer and o er some suggested areas for language development and integration between coarse-grained and ne-grained multi-thread systems. We discuss results from three common simulation algorithmic areas including: partial di erential equations; graph cluster metric calculations and random number generation. We report on programming experiences and selected performance for these algorithms on: single and multiple GPUs; multi-core CPUs; a CellBE; and using OpenCL. We discuss programmer usability issues and the outlook and trends in multi-core programming for scienti c applications developers

    Distance support in-service engineering for the high energy laser

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    The U.S. Navy anticipates moving to a shipboard high-energy laser program of record in the fiscal year 2018 and achieving an initial operational capability by 2020. The design of a distance support capability within the high-energy laser system was expected to assist the Navy in reaching this goal. This capstone project explored the current Navy architecture for distance support and applied system engineering methodologies to develop a conceptual distance support framework with application to the high-energy laser system. A model and simulation of distance support functions were developed and used to analyze the feasibility in terms of performance, cost, and risk. Results of this capstone study showed that the implementation of distance support for the high-energy laser system is feasible and would reduce the total ownership cost over the life of the program. Furthermore, the capstone shows that moving toward the team’s recommended distance support framework will address current gaps in the Navy distance support architecture and will provide a methodology tailored to modern enterprise naval systems.http://archive.org/details/distancesupporti1094545248Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited

    A Power-Efficient Methodology for Mapping Applications on Multi-Processor System-on-Chip Architectures

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    This work introduces an application mapping methodology and case study for multi-processor on-chip architectures. Starting from the description of an application in standard sequential code (e.g. in C), first the application is profiled, parallelized when possible, then its components are moved to hardware implementation when necessary to satisfy performance and power constraints. After mapping, with the use of hardware objects to handle concurrency, the application power consumption can be further optimized by a task-based scheduler for the remaining software part, without the need for operating system support. The key contributions of this work are: a methodology for high-level hardware/software partitioning that allows the designer to use the same code for both hardware and software models for simulation, providing nevertheless preliminary estimations for timing and power consumption; and a task-based scheduling algorithm that does not require operating system support. The methodology has been applied to the co-exploration of an industrial case study: an MPEG4 VGA real-time encoder
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