• Title of article

    MPI- and CUDA- implementations of modal finite difference method for P-SV wave propagation modeling

  • Author/Authors

    Samadiyeh، Hossein نويسنده Earthquake Research Center,Ferdowsi University of Mashhad,Mashhad,Iran , , Khajavi، Reza نويسنده Earthquake Research Center,Ferdowsi University of Mashhad,Mashhad,Iran ,

  • Issue Information
    دوفصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2016
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    185
  • To page
    202
  • Abstract
    Among different discretization approaches, Finite Difference Method (FDM) is widely used for acoustic and elastic full-wave form modeling. An inevitable deficit of the technique, however, is its sever requirement to computational resources. A promising solution is parallelization, where the problem is broken into several segments, and the calculations are distributed over different processors. For the present FD routines, however, such parallelization technique inevitably needs domain-decomposition and inter-core data exchange, due to the coupling of the governing equations. In this study, a new FD-based procedure for seismic wave modeling, named as ‘Modal Finite Difference Method (MFDM)” is introduced, which deals with the simulation in the decoupled modal space; thus, neither domaindecomposition nor inter-core data exchange is anymore required, which greatly simplifies parallelization for both MPI- and CUDA implementations over CPUs and GPUs. With MFDM, it is also possible to simply cut off less-significant modes and run the routine for just the important ones, which will effectively reduce computation and storage costs. The efficiency of the proposed MFDM is shown by some numerical examples.
  • Keywords
    Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) , Message passing interface (MPI) , modal , Wave propagation , Finite difference method
  • Journal title
    Journal of Theoretical and Applied Vibration and Acoustics
  • Serial Year
    2016
  • Journal title
    Journal of Theoretical and Applied Vibration and Acoustics
  • Record number

    2401110