52,050 research outputs found
Architecture to integrate broadband access networks and wireless grids
Today, the access networks face two main challenges: the increasing
bandwidth demand and mobility trends. All this will require fundamental
changes to the operations of access networks, the functionality of network
nodes and the architecture itself. By other side, the evolution of computing and
communication networks toward decentralized and distributed systems implies
that all the intelligence is on the edge nodes of the networks. Integrating wireless
devices with the traditional wired grid infrastructure will allow the access
(transfer, processing, etc) to the information that is now scattered across the different
devices. In this paper, we present a new architecture and a cost model to
support the new requirements of broadband access (fixed and nomadic users)
and wireless grids in an integrated way
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A classification of emerging and traditional grid systems
The grid has evolved in numerous distinct phases. It started in the early â90s as a model of metacomputing in which supercomputers share resources; subsequently, researchers added the ability to share data. This is usually referred to as the first-generation grid. By the late â90s, researchers had outlined the framework for second-generation grids, characterized by their use of grid middleware systems to âglueâ different grid technologies together. Third-generation grids originated in the early millennium when Web technology was combined with second-generation grids. As a result, the invisible grid, in which grid complexity is fully hidden through resource virtualization, started receiving attention. Subsequently, grid researchers identified the requirement for semantically rich knowledge grids, in which middleware technologies are more intelligent and autonomic. Recently, the necessity for grids to support and extend the ambient intelligence vision has emerged. In AmI, humans are surrounded by computing technologies that are unobtrusively embedded in their surroundings.
However, third-generation gridsâ current architecture doesnât meet the requirements of next-generation grids (NGG) and service-oriented knowledge utility (SOKU).4 A few years ago, a group of independent experts, arranged by the European Commission, identified these shortcomings as a way to identify potential European grid research priorities for 2010 and beyond. The experts envision grid systemsâ information, knowledge, and processing capabilities as a set of utility services.3 Consequently, new grid systems are emerging to materialize these visions. Here, we review emerging grids and classify them to motivate further research and help establish a solid foundation in this rapidly evolving area
Querying Large Physics Data Sets Over an Information Grid
Optimising use of the Web (WWW) for LHC data analysis is a complex problem
and illustrates the challenges arising from the integration of and computation
across massive amounts of information distributed worldwide. Finding the right
piece of information can, at times, be extremely time-consuming, if not
impossible. So-called Grids have been proposed to facilitate LHC computing and
many groups have embarked on studies of data replication, data migration and
networking philosophies. Other aspects such as the role of 'middleware' for
Grids are emerging as requiring research. This paper positions the need for
appropriate middleware that enables users to resolve physics queries across
massive data sets. It identifies the role of meta-data for query resolution and
the importance of Information Grids for high-energy physics analysis rather
than just Computational or Data Grids. This paper identifies software that is
being implemented at CERN to enable the querying of very large collaborating
HEP data-sets, initially being employed for the construction of CMS detectors.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Smart Grid Technologies in Europe: An Overview
The old electricity network infrastructure has proven to be inadequate, with respect to modern challenges such as alternative energy sources, electricity demand and energy saving policies. Moreover, Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) seem to have reached an adequate level of reliability and flexibility in order to support a new concept of electricity networkâthe smart grid. In this work, we will analyse the state-of-the-art of smart grids, in their technical, management, security, and optimization aspects. We will also provide a brief overview of the regulatory aspects involved in the development of a smart grid, mainly from the viewpoint of the European Unio
Adaptive Mesh Refinement for Characteristic Grids
I consider techniques for Berger-Oliger adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) when
numerically solving partial differential equations with wave-like solutions,
using characteristic (double-null) grids. Such AMR algorithms are naturally
recursive, and the best-known past Berger-Oliger characteristic AMR algorithm,
that of Pretorius & Lehner (J. Comp. Phys. 198 (2004), 10), recurses on
individual "diamond" characteristic grid cells. This leads to the use of
fine-grained memory management, with individual grid cells kept in
2-dimensional linked lists at each refinement level. This complicates the
implementation and adds overhead in both space and time.
Here I describe a Berger-Oliger characteristic AMR algorithm which instead
recurses on null \emph{slices}. This algorithm is very similar to the usual
Cauchy Berger-Oliger algorithm, and uses relatively coarse-grained memory
management, allowing entire null slices to be stored in contiguous arrays in
memory. The algorithm is very efficient in both space and time.
I describe discretizations yielding both 2nd and 4th order global accuracy.
My code implementing the algorithm described here is included in the electronic
supplementary materials accompanying this paper, and is freely available to
other researchers under the terms of the GNU general public license.Comment: 37 pages, 15 figures (40 eps figure files, 8 of them color; all are
viewable ok in black-and-white), 1 mpeg movie, uses Springer-Verlag svjour3
document class, includes C++ source code. Changes from v1: revised in
response to referee comments: many references added, new figure added to
better explain the algorithm, other small changes, C++ code updated to latest
versio
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