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Non-equilibrium surface growth for competitive growth models and applications to conservative parallel discrete event simulations

Posted on:2008-07-10Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Mississippi State UniversityCandidate:Verma, Poonam SantoshFull Text:PDF
GTID:1449390005472930Subject:Physics
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Non-equilibrium surface growth for competitive growth models in (1+1) dimensions, particularly mixing random deposition (RD) with correlated growth process which occur with probability p are studied. The composite mixtures are found to be in the universality class of the correlated growth process, and a nonuniversal exponent delta is identified in the scaling in p. The only effects of the RD admixture are dilations of the time and height scales which result in a slowdown of the dynamics of building up the correlations. The bulk morphology is taken into account and is reflected in the surface roughening, as well as the scaling behavior. It is found that the continuum equations and scaling laws for RD added, in particular, to Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) processes are partly determined from the underlying bulk structures. Nonequilibrium surface growth analysis are also applied to a study of the static and dynamic load balancing for a conservative update algorithm for Parallel Discrete Event Simulations (PDES). This load balancing is governed by the KPZ equation. For uneven load distributions in conservative PDES simulations, the simulated (virtual) time horizon (VTH) per Processing Element (PE) and the simulated time horizon per volume element N v are used to study the PEs progress in terms of utilization. The width of these time horizons relates to the desynchronization of the system of processors, and is related to the memory requirements of the PEs. The utilization increases when dynamic, rather than static, load balancing is performed.
Keywords/Search Tags:Growth, Load balancing, Conservative
PDF Full Text Request
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