Marc Alexander Schweitzer

2papers

2 Papers

NAAug 10, 2022
A dimension-oblivious domain decomposition method based on space-filling curves

Michael Griebel, Marc Alexander Schweitzer, Lukas Troska

In this paper we present an algebraic dimension-oblivious two-level domain decomposition solver for discretizations of elliptic partial differential equations. The proposed parallel solver is based on a space-filling curve partitioning approach that is applicable to any discretization, i.e. it directly operates on the assembled matrix equations. Moreover, it allows for the effective use of arbitrary processor numbers independent of the dimension of the underlying partial differential equation while maintaining optimal convergence behavior. This is the core property required to attain a sparse grid based combination method with extreme scalability which can utilize exascale parallel systems efficiently. Moreover, this approach provides a basis for the development of a fault-tolerant solver for the numerical treatment of high-dimensional problems. To achieve the required data redundancy we are therefore concerned with large overlaps of our domain decomposition which we construct via space-filling curves. In this paper, we propose our space-filling curve based domain decomposition solver and present its convergence properties and scaling behavior. The results of numerical experiments clearly show that our approach provides optimal convergence and scaling behavior in arbitrary dimension utilizing arbitrary processor numbers.

12.9NAApr 30
A Parallel-in-Time Combination Method for Parabolic Problems

Michael Griebel, Marc Alexander Schweitzer, Lukas Troska

In this article, we present a parallel discretization and solution method for parabolic problems with a higher number of space dimensions. It consists of a parallel-in-time approach using the multigrid reduction-in-time algorithm MGRIT with its implementation in the library XBraid, the sparse grid combination method for discretizing the resulting elliptic problems in space, and a domain decomposition method for each of the subproblems in the combination method based on the space-filling curve approach. As a result, we obtain an extremely fast and embarrassingly parallel solver with excellent speedup and scale-up qualities, which is perfectly suited for parabolic problems with up to six space dimensions. We describe our new parallel approach and show its superior parallelization properties for the heat equation, the chemical master equation and some exemplary stochastic differential equations.