5,534 research outputs found
A Holistic Approach to Log Data Analysis in High-Performance Computing Systems: The Case of IBM Blue Gene/Q
The complexity and cost of managing high-performance computing
infrastructures are on the rise. Automating management and repair through
predictive models to minimize human interventions is an attempt to increase
system availability and contain these costs. Building predictive models that
are accurate enough to be useful in automatic management cannot be based on
restricted log data from subsystems but requires a holistic approach to data
analysis from disparate sources. Here we provide a detailed multi-scale
characterization study based on four datasets reporting power consumption,
temperature, workload, and hardware/software events for an IBM Blue Gene/Q
installation. We show that the system runs a rich parallel workload, with low
correlation among its components in terms of temperature and power, but higher
correlation in terms of events. As expected, power and temperature correlate
strongly, while events display negative correlations with load and power. Power
and workload show moderate correlations, and only at the scale of components.
The aim of the study is a systematic, integrated characterization of the
computing infrastructure and discovery of correlation sources and levels to
serve as basis for future predictive modeling efforts.Comment: 12 pages, 7 Figure
Vlasov simulations of Kinetic Alfv\'en Waves at proton kinetic scales
Kinetic Alfv\'en waves represent an important subject in space plasma
physics, since they are thought to play a crucial role in the development of
the turbulent energy cascade in the solar wind plasma at short wavelengths (of
the order of the proton inertial length and beyond). A full understanding
of the physical mechanisms which govern the kinetic plasma dynamics at these
scales can provide important clues on the problem of the turbulent dissipation
and heating in collisionless systems. In this paper, hybrid Vlasov-Maxwell
simulations are employed to analyze in detail the features of the kinetic
Alfv\'en waves at proton kinetic scales, in typical conditions of the solar
wind environment. In particular, linear and nonlinear regimes of propagation of
these fluctuations have been investigated in a single-wave situation, focusing
on the physical processes of collisionless Landau damping and wave-particle
resonant interaction. Interestingly, since for wavelengths close to and
proton plasma beta of order unity the kinetic Alfv\'en waves have small
phase speed compared to the proton thermal velocity, wave-particle interaction
processes produce significant deformations in the core of the particle velocity
distribution, appearing as phase space vortices and resulting in flat-top
velocity profiles. Moreover, as the Eulerian hybrid Vlasov-Maxwell algorithm
allows for a clean almost noise-free description of the velocity space,
three-dimensional plots of the proton velocity distribution help to emphasize
how the plasma departs from the Maxwellian configuration of thermodynamic
equilibrium due to nonlinear kinetic effects
Response to Comment on `Undamped electrostatic plasma waves' [Phys. Plasmas 19, 092103 (2012)]
Numerical and experimental evidence is given for the occurrence of the
plateau states and concomitant corner modes proposed in \cite{valentini12}. It
is argued that these states provide a better description of reality for small
amplitude off-dispersion disturbances than the conventional
Bernstein-Greene-Kruskal or cnoidal states such as those proposed in
\cite{comment
Radiation reaction and quantum damped harmonic oscillator
By taking a Klein-Gordon field as the environment of an harmonic oscillator
and using a new method for dealing with quantum dissipative systems (minimal
coupling method), the quantum dynamics and radiation reaction for a quantum
damped harmonic oscillator investigated. Applying perturbation method, some
transition probabilities indicating the way energy flows between oscillator,
reservoir and quantum vacuum, obtainedComment: 12 pages. Accepted for publication in Mod. Phys. Lett.
Solar wind interaction with the Earth's magnetosphere: the role of reconnection in the presence of a large scale sheared flow
Abstract. The Earth's magnetosphere and solar wind environment is a laboratory of excellence for the study of the physics of collisionless magnetic reconnection. At low latitude magnetopause, magnetic reconnection develops as a secondary instability due to the stretching of magnetic field lines advected by large scale Kelvin-Helmholtz vortices. In particular, reconnection takes place in the sheared magnetic layer that forms between adjacent vortices during vortex pairing. The process generates magnetic islands with typical size of the order of the ion inertial length, much smaller than the MHD scale of the vortices and much larger than the electron inertial length. The process of reconnection and island formation sets up spontaneously, without any need for special boundary conditions or initial conditions, and independently of the initial in-plane magnetic field topology, whether homogeneous or sheared
Advances in the management of HPV-related oropharyngeal cancer
Patients with human papillomavirus- (HPV-) related oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) have a better prognosis
than HPV-negative OPSCC when treated with standard high-dose cisplatin-based chemoradiotherapy. Consistent with this
assertion and due to younger age at diagnosis, novel approaches tominimize treatment sequelaewhile preserving survival outcomes
become of paramount importance. Here, we critically reviewed the evidence-based literature supporting the deintensification
strategies in HPV-related OPSCC management, including radiotherapy dose and/or volume reduction, replacement of cisplatin
radiosensitising chemotherapy, and the use of transoral surgery. Undoubtedly, further researches are needed before changing the
standard of care in this setting of patients
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