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Dive into the research topics where J. Hittinger is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Hittinger.


Journal of Computational Physics | 2011

High-order, finite-volume methods in mapped coordinates

Phillip Colella; M. Dorr; J. Hittinger; Daniel F. Martin

We present an approach for constructing finite-volume methods for flux-divergence forms to any order of accuracy defined as the image of a smooth mapping from a rectangular discretization of an abstract coordinate space. Our approach is based on two ideas. The first is that of using higher-order quadrature rules to compute the flux averages over faces that generalize a method developed for Cartesian grids to the case of mapped grids. The second is a method for computing the averages of the metric terms on faces such that freestream preservation is automatically satisfied. We derive detailed formulas for the cases of fourth-order accurate discretizations of linear elliptic and hyperbolic partial differential equations. For the latter case, we combine the method so derived with Runge-Kutta time discretization and demonstrate how to incorporate a high-order accurate limiter with the goal of obtaining a method that is robust in the presence of discontinuities and underresolved gradients. For both elliptic and hyperbolic problems, we demonstrate that the resulting methods are fourth-order accurate for smooth solutions.


Physics of Plasmas | 2004

Effects of ion trapping on crossed-laser-beam stimulated Brillouin scattering

E. A. Williams; Bruce I. Cohen; L. Divol; M. Dorr; J. Hittinger; D. E. Hinkel; A. B. Langdon; R. K. Kirkwood; D. H. Froula; S. H. Glenzer

An analysis of the effects of ion trapping on ion acoustic waves excited by the stimulated Brillouin scattering of crossing intense laser beams is presented. Ion trapping alters the dispersion of ion acoustic waves by nonlinearly shifting the normal mode frequency and by reducing the ion Landau damping. This in turn can influence the energy transfer between two crossing laser beams in the presence of plasma flows such that stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) occurs. The same ion trapping physics can influence the saturation of SBS in other circumstances. A one-dimensional analytical model is presented along with reasonably successful comparisons of the theory to results from particle simulations and laboratory experiments. An analysis of the vulnerability of the National Ignition Facility Inertial Confinement Fusion point design [S. W. Haan et al., Fusion Sci. Technol. 41, 164 (2002)] is also presented.


IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2010

A New Class of Nonlinear Finite-Volume Methods for Vlasov Simulation

Jeffrey W. Banks; J. Hittinger

Methods for the numerical discretization of the Vlasov equation should efficiently use the phase-space discretization and should introduce only enough numerical dissipation to promote stability and control oscillations. A new high-order nonlinear finite-volume algorithm for the Vlasov equation that discretely conserves particle number and controls oscillations is presented. The method is fourth order in space and time in well-resolved regions but smoothly reduces to a third-order upwind scheme as features become poorly resolved. The new scheme is applied to several standard problems for the Vlasov-Poisson system, and the results are compared with those from other finite-volume approaches, including an artificial viscosity scheme and the piecewise parabolic method. It is shown that the new scheme is able to control oscillations while preserving a higher degree of fidelity of the solution than the other approaches.


Nuclear Fusion | 2007

Edge Gyrokinetic Theory and Continuum Simulations

X.Q. Xu; Z. Xiong; M. Dorr; J. Hittinger; K. Bodi; J. Candy; Bruce I. Cohen; R.H. Cohen; P. Colella; G.D. Kerbel; S. I. Krasheninnikov; W. M. Nevins; Hong Qin; T.D. Rognlien; Philip B. Snyder; M. V. Umansky

The following results are presented from the development and application of TEMPEST, a fully nonlinear (full-f) five-dimensional (3d2v) gyrokinetic continuum edge-plasma code. (1) As a test of the interaction of collisions and parallel streaming, TEMPEST is compared with published analytic and numerical results for endloss of particles confined by combined electrostatic and magnetic wells. Good agreement is found over a wide range of collisionality, confining potential and mirror ratio, and the required velocity space resolution is modest. (2) In a large-aspect-ratio circular geometry, excellent agreement is found for a neoclassical equilibrium with parallel ion flow in the banana regime with zero temperature gradient and radial electric field. (3) The four-dimensional (2d2v) version of the code produces the first self-consistent simulation results of collisionless damping of geodesic acoustic modes and zonal flow (Rosenbluth–Hinton residual) with Boltzmann electrons using a full-f code. The electric field is also found to agree with the standard neoclassical expression for steep density and ion temperature gradients in the plateau regime. In divertor geometry, it is found that the endloss of particles and energy induces parallel flow stronger than the core neoclassical predictions in the SOL.


ieee international conference on high performance computing data and analytics | 2014

A study on balancing parallelism, data locality, and recomputation in existing PDE solvers

Catherine Olschanowsky; Michelle Mills Strout; Stephen M. Guzik; John Loffeld; J. Hittinger

Structured-grid PDE solver frameworks parallelize over boxes, which are rectangular domains of cells or faces in a structured grid. In the Chombo framework, the box sizes are typically 163 or 323, but larger box sizes such as 1283 would result in less surface area and therefore less storage, copying, and/or ghost cells communication overhead. Unfortunately, current on node parallelization schemes perform poorly for these larger box sizes. In this paper, we investigate 30 different inter-loop optimization strategies and demonstrate the parallel scaling advantages of some of these variants on NUMA multicore nodes. Shifted, fused, and communication-avoiding variants for 1283 boxes result in close to ideal parallel scaling and come close to matching the performance of 163 boxes on three different multicore systems for a benchmark that is a proxy for program idioms found in Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD) codes.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Simulation of neoclassical transport with the continuum gyrokinetic code COGENT

M. A. Dorf; R.H. Cohen; M. Dorr; T.D. Rognlien; J. Hittinger; J. Compton; Phillip Colella; D. Martin; Peter McCorquodale

The development of the continuum gyrokinetic code COGENT for edge plasma simulations is reported. The present version of the code models a nonlinear axisymmetric 4D (R, v∥, μ) gyrokinetic equation coupled to the long-wavelength limit of the gyro-Poisson equation. Here, R is the particle gyrocenter coordinate in the poloidal plane, and v∥ and μ are the guiding center velocity parallel to the magnetic field and the magnetic moment, respectively. The COGENT code utilizes a fourth-order finite-volume (conservative) discretization combined with arbitrary mapped multiblock grid technology (nearly field-aligned on blocks) to handle the complexity of tokamak divertor geometry with high accuracy. Topics presented are the implementation of increasingly detailed model collision operators, and the results of neoclassical transport simulations including the effects of a strong radial electric field characteristic of a tokamak pedestal under H-mode conditions.


Journal of Computational Physics | 2015

High-order finite-volume methods for hyperbolic conservation laws on mapped multiblock grids

Peter McCorquodale; M. Dorr; J. Hittinger; Phillip Colella

We present an approach to solving hyperbolic conservation laws by finite-volume methods on mapped multiblock grids, extending the approach of Colella, Dorr, Hittinger, and Martin (2011) 10 for grids with a single mapping. We consider mapped multiblock domains for mappings that are conforming at inter-block boundaries. By using a smooth continuation of the mapping into ghost cells surrounding a block, we reduce the inter-block communication problem to finding an accurate, robust interpolation into these ghost cells from neighboring blocks. We demonstrate fourth-order accuracy for the advection equation for multiblock coordinate systems in two and three dimensions.


Journal of Computational Physics | 2013

Block-structured adaptive mesh refinement algorithms for Vlasov simulation

J. Hittinger; Jeffrey W. Banks

Direct discretization of continuum kinetic equations, like the Vlasov equation, are under-utilized because the distribution function generally exists in a high-dimensional (>3D) space and computational cost increases geometrically with dimension. We propose to use high-order finite-volume techniques with block-structured adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) to reduce the computational cost. The primary complication comes from a solution state comprised of variables of different dimensions. We develop the algorithms required to extend standard single-dimension block structured AMR to the multi-dimension case. Specifically, algorithms for reduction and injection operations that transfer data between mesh hierarchies of different dimensions are explained in detail. In addition, modifications to the basic AMR algorithm that enable the use of high-order spatial and temporal discretizations are discussed. Preliminary results for a standard 1D+1V Vlasov-Poisson test problem are presented. Results indicate that there is potential for significant savings for some classes of Vlasov problems.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Continuum kinetic modeling of the tokamak plasma edge

M. A. Dorf; M. Dorr; J. Hittinger; R. H. Cohen; T.D. Rognlien

The first 4D (axisymmetric) high-order continuum gyrokinetic transport simulations that span the magnetic separatrix of a tokamak are presented. The modeling is performed with the COGENT code, which is distinguished by fourth-order finite-volume discretization combined with mapped multiblock grid technology to handle the strong anisotropy of plasma transport and the complex X-point divertor geometry with high accuracy. The calculations take into account the effects of fully nonlinear Fokker-Plank collisions, electrostatic potential variations, and anomalous radial transport. Topics discussed include: (a) ion orbit loss and the associated toroidal rotation and (b) edge plasma relaxation in the presence of anomalous radial transport.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2009

High-order finite-volume adaptive methods on locally rectangular grids

P. Colella; M. Dorr; J. Hittinger; Daniel F. Martin; Peter McCorquodale

We are developing a new class of finite-volume methods on locally-refined and mapped grids, which are at least fourth-order accurate in regions where the solution is smooth. This paper discusses the implementation of such methods for time-dependent problems on both Cartesian and mapped grids with adaptive mesh refinement. We show 2D results with the Berger-Colella shock-ramp problem in Cartesian coordinates, and fourth-order accuracy of the solution of a Gaussian pulse problem in a polytropic gas in mapped coordinates.

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M. Dorr

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Bruce I. Cohen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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T.D. Rognlien

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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R.H. Cohen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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G.D. Kerbel

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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W. M. Nevins

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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R. L. Berger

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Jeffrey W. Banks

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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M. A. Dorf

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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X.Q. Xu

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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