A new electromagnetic particle-in-cell model with adaptive mesh refinement for high-performance parallel computation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:414018
DOI10.1016/j.jcp.2011.08.002zbMath1241.78048OpenAlexW2022598482MaRDI QIDQ414018
Publication date: 8 May 2012
Published in: Journal of Computational Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcp.2011.08.002
adaptive mesh refinementmagnetic reconnectionelectromagnetic particle-in-cell modelmassively parallel computationmulti-scale phenomenon
Lua error in Module:PublicationMSCList at line 37: attempt to index local 'msc_result' (a nil value).
Related Items (5)
A particle-in-cell method for the simulation of plasmas based on an unconditionally stable field solver ⋮ PHARE: parallel hybrid particle-in-cell code with patch-based adaptive mesh refinement ⋮ A new method to dispatch split particles in particle-in-cell codes ⋮ FLEKS: a flexible particle-in-cell code for multi-scale plasma simulations ⋮ 3D magnetospheric parallel hybrid multi-grid method applied to planet-plasma interactions
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Controlling self-force errors at refinement boundaries for AMR-PIC
- An implicit method for electromagnetic plasma simulation in two dimensions
- The macro-EM particle simulation method and a study of collisionless magnetic reconnection
- A portable parallel particle program
- A general concurrent algorithm for plasma particle-in-cell simulation codes
- Particle rezoning for multidimensional kinetic particle-in-cell simulations
- A new algorithm for charge deposition for multiple-grid method for PIC simulations in \(r-z\) cylindrical coordinates
- Electromagnetic full particle code with adaptive mesh refinement technique: application to the current sheet evolution
- Numerical solution of initial boundary value problems involving maxwell's equations in isotropic media
- An extended FDTD scheme for the wave equation: application to multiscale electromagnetic simulation
This page was built for publication: A new electromagnetic particle-in-cell model with adaptive mesh refinement for high-performance parallel computation