Cargando…

Enabling Large Scale Simulations for Particle Accelerators

International high-energy particle physics research centers, like CERN and Fermilab, require excessive studies and simulations to plan for the upcoming upgrades of the world’s largest particle accelerators, and the design of future machines given the technological challenges and tight budgetary cons...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Iliakis, Konstantinos, Timko, Helga, Xydis, Sotirios, Tsapatsaris, Panagiotis, Soudris, Dimitrios
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tpds.2022.3192707
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2845646
_version_ 1780976559930212352
author Iliakis, Konstantinos
Timko, Helga
Xydis, Sotirios
Tsapatsaris, Panagiotis
Soudris, Dimitrios
author_facet Iliakis, Konstantinos
Timko, Helga
Xydis, Sotirios
Tsapatsaris, Panagiotis
Soudris, Dimitrios
author_sort Iliakis, Konstantinos
collection CERN
description International high-energy particle physics research centers, like CERN and Fermilab, require excessive studies and simulations to plan for the upcoming upgrades of the world’s largest particle accelerators, and the design of future machines given the technological challenges and tight budgetary constraints. The Beam Longitudinal Dynamics (BLonD) simulator suite incorporates the most detailed and complex physics phenomena in the field of longitudinal beam dynamics, required for providing extremely accurate predictions. Modern challenges in beam dynamics dictate for longer, larger and numerous simulation studies to draw meaningful conclusions that will drive the baseline choices for the daily operation of current machines and the design choices of future projects. These studies are extremely time consuming, and would be impractical to perform without a High-Performance Computing oriented simulator framework. In this article, at first, we design and evaluate a highly-optimized distributed version of BLonD. We combine approximate computing techniques, and leverage a dynamic load-balancing scheme to relax synchronization and improve scalability. In addition, we employ GPUs to accelerate the distributed implementation. We evaluate the highly optimized distributed beam longitudinal dynamics simulator in a supercomputing system and demonstrate speedups of more than two orders of magnitude when run on 32 GPU platforms, w.r.t. the previous state-of-art. By driving a wide range of new studies, the proposed high performance beam longitudinal dynamics simulator forms an invaluable tool for accelerator physicists.
id cern-2845646
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2022
record_format invenio
spelling cern-28456462023-03-28T13:20:52Zdoi:10.1109/tpds.2022.3192707http://cds.cern.ch/record/2845646engIliakis, KonstantinosTimko, HelgaXydis, SotiriosTsapatsaris, PanagiotisSoudris, DimitriosEnabling Large Scale Simulations for Particle AcceleratorsAccelerators and Storage RingsInternational high-energy particle physics research centers, like CERN and Fermilab, require excessive studies and simulations to plan for the upcoming upgrades of the world’s largest particle accelerators, and the design of future machines given the technological challenges and tight budgetary constraints. The Beam Longitudinal Dynamics (BLonD) simulator suite incorporates the most detailed and complex physics phenomena in the field of longitudinal beam dynamics, required for providing extremely accurate predictions. Modern challenges in beam dynamics dictate for longer, larger and numerous simulation studies to draw meaningful conclusions that will drive the baseline choices for the daily operation of current machines and the design choices of future projects. These studies are extremely time consuming, and would be impractical to perform without a High-Performance Computing oriented simulator framework. In this article, at first, we design and evaluate a highly-optimized distributed version of BLonD. We combine approximate computing techniques, and leverage a dynamic load-balancing scheme to relax synchronization and improve scalability. In addition, we employ GPUs to accelerate the distributed implementation. We evaluate the highly optimized distributed beam longitudinal dynamics simulator in a supercomputing system and demonstrate speedups of more than two orders of magnitude when run on 32 GPU platforms, w.r.t. the previous state-of-art. By driving a wide range of new studies, the proposed high performance beam longitudinal dynamics simulator forms an invaluable tool for accelerator physicists.oai:cds.cern.ch:28456462022
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Iliakis, Konstantinos
Timko, Helga
Xydis, Sotirios
Tsapatsaris, Panagiotis
Soudris, Dimitrios
Enabling Large Scale Simulations for Particle Accelerators
title Enabling Large Scale Simulations for Particle Accelerators
title_full Enabling Large Scale Simulations for Particle Accelerators
title_fullStr Enabling Large Scale Simulations for Particle Accelerators
title_full_unstemmed Enabling Large Scale Simulations for Particle Accelerators
title_short Enabling Large Scale Simulations for Particle Accelerators
title_sort enabling large scale simulations for particle accelerators
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tpds.2022.3192707
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2845646
work_keys_str_mv AT iliakiskonstantinos enablinglargescalesimulationsforparticleaccelerators
AT timkohelga enablinglargescalesimulationsforparticleaccelerators
AT xydissotirios enablinglargescalesimulationsforparticleaccelerators
AT tsapatsarispanagiotis enablinglargescalesimulationsforparticleaccelerators
AT soudrisdimitrios enablinglargescalesimulationsforparticleaccelerators