English

SpECTRE: A Task-based Discontinuous Galerkin Code for Relativistic Astrophysics

High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena 2022-11-03 v2 Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology Computational Physics

Abstract

We introduce a new relativistic astrophysics code, SpECTRE, that combines a discontinuous Galerkin method with a task-based parallelism model. SpECTRE's goal is to achieve more accurate solutions for challenging relativistic astrophysics problems such as core-collapse supernovae and binary neutron star mergers. The robustness of the discontinuous Galerkin method allows for the use of high-resolution shock capturing methods in regions where (relativistic) shocks are found, while exploiting high-order accuracy in smooth regions. A task-based parallelism model allows efficient use of the largest supercomputers for problems with a heterogeneous workload over disparate spatial and temporal scales. We argue that the locality and algorithmic structure of discontinuous Galerkin methods will exhibit good scalability within a task-based parallelism framework. We demonstrate the code on a wide variety of challenging benchmark problems in (non)-relativistic (magneto)-hydrodynamics. We demonstrate the code's scalability including its strong scaling on the NCSA Blue Waters supercomputer up to the machine's full capacity of 22,380 nodes using 671,400 threads.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1609.00098,
  title  = {SpECTRE: A Task-based Discontinuous Galerkin Code for Relativistic Astrophysics},
  author = {Lawrence E. Kidder and Scott E. Field and Francois Foucart and Erik Schnetter and Saul A. Teukolsky and Andy Bohn and Nils Deppe and Peter Diener and François Hébert and Jonas Lippuner and Jonah Miller and Christian D. Ott and Mark A. Scheel and Trevor Vincent},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1609.00098},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

41 pages, 13 figures, and 7 tables. Ancillary data contains simulation input files

R2 v1 2026-06-22T15:37:18.273Z