Thorsten Kurth
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Thorsten Kurth.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2007
Stephan Durr; Z. Fodor; Christian Hoelbling; Thorsten Kurth
We determine the topological susceptibility in the SU(3) pure gauge theory. We perform a series of high-statistics lattice studies and take the combined continuum and infinite volume limit. We find χtopr04 = 0.0524(7)(6), which translates into χtop1/4 = 193(1)(8) MeV with the second error exclusively due to the intrinsic scale ambiguity.
ieee international conference on high performance computing, data, and analytics | 2016
Douglas W. Doerfler; Jack Deslippe; Samuel Williams; Leonid Oliker; Brandon Cook; Thorsten Kurth; Mathieu Lobet; Tareq M. Malas; Jean-Luc Vay; Henri Vincenti
The Roofline Performance Model is a visually intuitive method used to bound the sustained peak floating-point performance of any given arithmetic kernel on any given processor architecture. In the Roofline, performance is nominally measured in floating-point operations per second as a function of arithmetic intensity (operations per byte of data). In this study we determine the Roofline for the Intel Knights Landing (KNL) processor, determining the sustained peak memory bandwidth and floating-point performance for all levels of the memory hierarchy, in all the different KNL cluster modes. We then determine arithmetic intensity and performance for a suite of application kernels being targeted for the KNL based supercomputer Cori, and make comparisons to current Intel Xeon processors. Cori is the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center’s (NERSC) next generation supercomputer. Scheduled for deployment mid-2016, it will be one of the earliest and largest KNL deployments in the world.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2013
Thorsten Kurth; Noriyoshi Ishii; Takumi Doi; Sinya Aoki; Tetsuo Hatsuda
A bstractWe present a lattice QCD study of the phase shift of I = 2 ππ scattering on the basis of two different approaches: the standard finite volume approach by Lüscher and the recently introduced HAL QCD potential method. Quenched QCD simulations are performed on lattices with extents Ns = 16, 24, 32, 48 and Nt = 128 as well as lattice spacing a ~ 0.115 fm and a pion mass of mπ ~ 940 MeV. The phase shift and the scattering length are calculated in these two methods. In the potential method, the error is dominated by the systematic uncertainty associated with the violation of rotational symmetry due to finite lattice spacing. In Lüscher’s approach, such systematic uncertainty is difficult to be evaluated and thus is not included in this work. A systematic uncertainty attributed to the quenched approximation, however, is not evaluated in both methods. In case of the potential method, the phase shift can be calculated for arbitrary energies below the inelastic threshold. The energy dependence of the phase shift is also obtained from Lüscher’s method using different volumes and/or nonrest-frame extension of it. The results are found to agree well with the potential method.
ieee international conference on high performance computing data and analytics | 2016
Taylor Barnes; Brandon Cook; Jack Deslippe; Douglas W. Doerfler; Brian Friesen; Yun He; Thorsten Kurth; Tuomas Koskela; Mathieu Lobet; Tareq M. Malas; Leonid Oliker; Andrey Ovsyannikov; Abhinav Sarje; Jean-Luc Vay; Henri Vincenti; Samuel Williams; Pierre Carrier; Nathan Wichmann; Marcus Wagner; Paul R. C. Kent; Christopher Kerr; John M. Dennis
NERSC has partnered with 20 representative application teams to evaluate performance on the Xeon-Phi Knights Landing architecture and develop an application-optimization strategy for the greater NERSC workload on the recently installed Cori system. In this article, we present early case studies and summarized results from a subset of the 20 applications highlighting the impact of important architecture differences between the Xeon-Phi and traditional Xeon processors. We summarize the status of the applications and describe the greater optimization strategy that has formed.
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Lattice | 2011
Antonin Portelli; Stephan Durr; Zoltan Fodor; Julien Frison; Christian Hoelbling; Sandor D. Katz; Stefan Krieg; Thorsten Kurth; Laurent Lellouch; Thomas Lippert; Kalman Szabo; Alberto Ramos
At the precision reached in current lattice QCD calculations, electromagnetic effects are becoming numerically relevant. We will present preliminary results for electromagnetic corrections to light hadron masses, based on simulations in which a
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Lattice | 2011
Stephan Durr; Zoltan Fodor; Julien Frison; T. R. Hemmert; Christian Hoelbling; Sandor D. Katz; Stefan Krieg; Thorsten Kurth; Laurent Lellouch; Thomas Lippert; Antonin Portelli; Alberto Ramos; A. Schäfer; Kalman Szabo
\mathrm{U}(1)
Computer Physics Communications | 2017
Taylor Barnes; Thorsten Kurth; Pierre Carrier; Nathan Wichmann; David Prendergast; Paul R. C. Kent; Jack Deslippe
degree of freedom is superimposed on
ieee international conference on high performance computing data and analytics | 2017
Thorsten Kurth; Jian Zhang; Nadathur Satish; Evan Racah; Ioannis Mitliagkas; Md. Mostofa Ali Patwary; Tareq M. Malas; Narayanan Sundaram; Wahid Bhimji; Mikhail Smorkalov; Jack Deslippe; Mikhail Shiryaev; Srinivas Sridharan; Prabhat; Pradeep Dubey
N_f=2+1
Physical Review D | 2017
C. M. Bouchard; Chia Cheng Chang; Thorsten Kurth; Kostas Orginos; Andre Walker-Loud
QCD configurations from the BMW collaboration.
Physical Review D | 2014
Stephan Dürr; Zoltan Fodor; Christian Hoelbling; Stefan Krieg; Thorsten Kurth; Laurent Lellouch; Thomas Lippert; Rehan Malak; Thibaut Metivet; Antonin Portelli; Alfonso Sastre; Kalman Szabo
A status report is given for a joint project of the Budapest-Marseille-Wuppertal collaboration and the Regensburg group to study the quark mass-dependence of octet baryons in SU(3) Baryon XPT. This formulation is expected to extend to larger masses than Heavy-Baryon XPT. Its applicability is tested with 2+1 flavor data which cover three lattice spacings and pion masses down to about 190 MeV, in large volumes. Also polynomial and rational interpolations in M_\pi^2 and M_K^2 are used to assess the uncertainty due to the ansatz. Both frameworks are combined to explore the precision to be expected in a controlled determination of the nucleon sigma term and strangeness content.