Communication-Free Streaming Mesh Refinement

2005 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 309-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe P. Pébay ◽  
David Thompson

This article presents a technique for the adaptive refinement of tetrahedral meshes. What makes this method new is that no neighbor information is required for the refined mesh to be compatible everywhere. Refinement consists of inserting new vertices at edge midpoints until some tolerance (geometric or otherwise) is met. For a tetrahedron, the six edges present 26=64 possible subdivision combinations. The challenge is to triangulate the new vertices (i.e., the original vertices plus some subset of the edge midpoints) in a way that neighboring tetrahedra always generate the same triangles on their shared boundary. A geometric solution based on edge lengths was developed previously, but did not account for geometric degeneracies (edges of equal length). This article provides a solution that works in all cases, while remaining entirely communication-free.

1993 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 1898-1901 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Olszewski ◽  
T. Nakata ◽  
N. Takahashi ◽  
K. Fujiwara

2020 ◽  
Vol 224 ◽  
pp. 01011
Author(s):  
I Gruzintsev ◽  
M Kornilina ◽  
M Yakobovskiy

Algorithms for generating three-dimensional detailed computational meshes are considered. The algorithms are based on adaptive refinement of the original coarse meshes describing a 3D object. The purpose of adaptation is to form an accurate description of the volume and surface of a three-dimensional object for supercomputer modeling. Refinement of the boundary description is performed by projecting the cut elements of the coarse mesh onto the corresponding elements of the object’s surface.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongbo Yao ◽  
Zhengyong Ren ◽  
Jingtian Tang

<p>We present an accurate and fast finite element solver for global electromagnetic induction forward modeling problems in spherical Earth. We solve for the electric field equation using the first-order Nedelec elements. The magnetic field is then obtained by computing the curl of the electric field. The computational domain composed of the air space and the conductive Earth is discretized by disjoint unstructured tetrahedral elements. To improve the accuracy with an optimal number of unknowns, we propose a simple two-step goal-oriented adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) strategy. In the first step, an h-type AMR procedure is used to obtain an optimal finite element mesh. The mesh refinement is accomplished by bisection to generate a set of hierarchal tetrahedral meshes. The AMR procedure is driven by a goal-oriented error estimator, which is based on face jumps of normal components of current density. In the second step, we adopt the high-order finite elements at the last iteration to update the accuracy of final numerical solutions. This simple two-step adaptive strategy takes advantage of both h-type AMR and high-order basis functions, and in the meanwhile, it is also computationally economical. To improve efficiency, the solver is parallelized with an MPI-based domain decomposition technique. The sophisticated auxiliary space preconditioned linear solver is adopted to efficiently solve the linear system of equations. This new solver is verified on both semi-analytic and realistic 3-D Earth models. It can be used as a core to derive the inversion of global electromagnetic induction data.</p><p> </p>


AIAA Journal ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 928-932 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. N. Muthukrishnan ◽  
P. S. Shiakolas ◽  
R. V. Nambiar ◽  
K. L. Lawrence

1964 ◽  
Vol 04 (02) ◽  
pp. 186-192
Author(s):  
Leonel Costacurta

SummaryDental germs of the upper incisors of six-days old rats were studied for the uptake of leucine-H3 by different layers of the enamel organ in correlation to the various stages of the development of enamel.The longitudinal section of the tooth germ was divided into 15 zones of about equal length in order to facilitate the description and interpretation of results. Autoradiographic images of the histologic preparations from rats sacrificed 30 minutes, 1 hour, 1 day and 3 days after the injection were made. The strongest reactions were observed in dental germs of rats sacrificed 1 hour, and particularly one day, after the leucine-H3 injection.The uptake of this compound by the enamel matrix increases progressively up to the young enamel and then decreases to the distal extremity; the greatest quantity of this labeled amino-acid was observed in the primary and young enamel. The reactions were present in the transitional enamel only along a thin band close to the dentine-enamel junction.In the enamel organ leucine-H3 incorporation was greatest in the three layers, the zones corresponding to primary and young enamel. In zones corresponding to transitional enamel, the inner epithelium showed a small quantity, and the stellate reticulum a blackening only in its superficial part, were the blood vessels reach the enamel organ.


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