This paper describes CAMEL, a parallel environment for designing scientific applications based on the cellular automata mathematical model. CAMEL is an interactive environment designed to support the development of high performance applications in science and engineering. It offers the computing power of a highly parallel computer, hiding the architecture issues from a user. The system can be used both as a tool to model dynamic complex phenomena and as a computational model for parallel processing. By CAMEL a user might write programs to describe the actions of thousands of simple active agents, then observe the global complex evolution that arises from all the local interactions. The paper presents the programming environment and a significant application in the area of soil decontamination.
This paper describes CAMEL, a parallel environment for designing scientific applications based on the cellular automata mathematical model. CAMEL is an interactive environment designed to support the development of high performance applications in science and engineering. It offers the computing power of a highly parallel computer, hiding the architecture issues from a user. The system can be used both as a tool to model dynamic complex phenomena and as a computational model for parallel processing. By CAMEL a user might write programs to describe the actions of thousands of simple active agents, then observe the global complex evolution that arises from all the local interactions. The paper presents the programming environment and a significant application in the area of soil decontamination.
High performance scientific computing by a parallel cellular environment
DI GREGORIO, Salvatore;RONGO, Rocco;SPATARO, William;TALIA, Domenico
1997-01-01
Abstract
This paper describes CAMEL, a parallel environment for designing scientific applications based on the cellular automata mathematical model. CAMEL is an interactive environment designed to support the development of high performance applications in science and engineering. It offers the computing power of a highly parallel computer, hiding the architecture issues from a user. The system can be used both as a tool to model dynamic complex phenomena and as a computational model for parallel processing. By CAMEL a user might write programs to describe the actions of thousands of simple active agents, then observe the global complex evolution that arises from all the local interactions. The paper presents the programming environment and a significant application in the area of soil decontamination.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.