PIConGPU is a fully relativistic, manycore, 3D3V particle-in-cell (PIC) code. The Particle-in-Cell algorithm is a central tool in plasma physics. It describes the dynamics of a plasma by computing the motion of electrons and ions in the plasma based on Maxwell's equations.
PIConGPU implements various numerical schemes to solve the PIC cycle. Its features for the electro-magnetic PIC algorithm include:
- a central or Yee-lattice for fields
- particle pushers that solve the equation of motion for charged and neutral particles, e.g., the Boris- and the Vay-Pusher
- Maxwell field solvers, e.g. Yee's and Lehe's scheme
- rigorously charge conserving current deposition schemes, such as Esirkepov and EZ (Esirkepov meets ZigZag)
- macro-particle form factors ranging from NGP (0th order), CIC (1st), TSC (2nd), PQS (3rd) to PCS (4th)
and the electro-magnetic PIC algorithm is further self-consistently coupled to:
- classical radiation reaction (DOI:10.1016/j.cpc.2016.04.002)
- advanced field ionization methods (DOI:10.1103/PhysRevA.59.569, LV Keldysh, BSI)
Besides the electro-magnetic PIC algorithm and extensions to it, we developed a wide range of tools and diagnostics, e.g.:
- online, far-field radiation diagnostics for coherent and incoherent radiation emitted by charged particles
- full restart and output capabilities via openPMD, including parallel HDF5
- 2D and 3D live view and diagnostics tools
- a large selection of extensible online-plugins
As one of our supported compute platforms, GPUs provide a computational performance of several TFLOP/s at considerable lower invest and maintenance costs compared to multi CPU-based compute architectures of similar performance. The latest high-performance systems (TOP500) are enhanced by accelerator hardware that boost their peak performance up to the multi-PFLOP/s level. With its outstanding performance and scalability to more than 18'000 GPUs, PIConGPU was one of the finalists of the 2013 Gordon Bell Prize.
PIConGPU is developed and maintained by the Computational Radiation Physics Group at the Institute for Radiation Physics at HZDR in close collaboration with the Center for Information Services and High Performance Computing (ZIH) of the Technical University Dresden (TUD). We are a member of the Dresden GPU Center of Excellence that cooperates on a broad range of scientific GPU and manycore applications, workshops and teaching efforts.
PIConGPU is a scientific project. If you present and/or publish scientific results that used PIConGPU, you should set a reference to show your support.
Our according up-to-date publication at the time of your publication should be inquired from:
Please also consider adding yourself to our community map. We would love to hear from you!
The following slide should be part of oral presentations. It is intended to acknowledge the team maintaining PIConGPU and to support our community:
(coming soon) presentation_picongpu.pdf (svg version, key note version, png version: 1920x1080 and 1024x768)
PIConGPU is licensed under the GPLv3+. Furthermore, you can develop your own particle-mesh algorithms based on our general library PMacc that is shipped alongside PIConGPU. PMacc is dual licensed under both the GPLv3+ and LGPLv3+. For a detailed description, please refer to LICENSE.md
See our notes in INSTALL.rst.
Dear User, we hereby emphasize that we are still actively developing PIConGPU at great speed and do, from time to time, break backwards compatibility.
When using this software, please stick to the latest release or use the dev
branch containing the
latest changes. It also contains a file CHANGELOG.md
with the
latest changes (and how to update your simulations). Read it first before
updating between two versions! Also, we add a git tag
according to a version
number for each release.
For any questions regarding the usage of PIConGPU please do not contact the developers and maintainers directly.
Instead, please open an issue on GitHub.
Before you post a question, browse the PIConGPU documentation, wiki and the issue tracker to see if your question has been answered, already.
PIConGPU is a collaborative project. We thus encourage users to engage in answering questions of other users and post solutions to problems to the list. A problem you have encountered might be the future problem of another user.
In addition, please consider using the collaborative features of GitHub if you have questions or comments on code or documentation. This will allow other users to see the piece of code or documentation you are referring to.
Main ressources are in our online manual, the user section of our wiki, documentation files in .md
(Markdown) and .rst
(reStructuredText) format in this repository and a getting started video.
Feel free to visit picongpu.hzdr.de to learn more about the PIC algorithm.
PIConGPU ships new and frequent changes to the code in the development branch dev
.
From time to time we publish a new release
of PIConGPU. Before you pull the changes in, please read our
ChangeLog!
You may have to update some of your simulation .param
and .cfg
files by
hand since PIConGPU is an active project and new features often require changes
in input files. Additionally, a full description of new features and fixed bugs
in comparison to the previous release is provided in that file.
In case you decide to use new, potentially buggy and experimental features
from our dev
branch, be aware that you must participate or at least follow the development yourself.
Syntax changes and in-development bugs will not be announced outside of their according pull
requests and issues.
Before drafting a new release, we open a new release-*
branch from dev
with
the *
being the version number of the upcoming release. This branch only
receives bug fixes (feature freeze) and users are welcome to try it out
(however, the change log and a detailed announcement might still be missing in
it).
See CONTRIBUTING.md
If you like to jump in right away, see
- Dr. Michael Bussmann
- Dr. Sergei Bastrakov*
- Finn-Ole Carstens
- Dr. Alexander Debus
- Dr. Marco Garten*
- Dr. Axel Huebl*
- Brian Edward Marre
- Pawel Ordyna
- Dr. Richard Pausch*
- Franz Poeschel
- Dr. Klaus Steiniger*
- Rene Widera*
The PIConGPU Team expresses its gratitude to:
Florian Berninger, Heiko Burau, Fabia Dietrich, Robert Dietrich, Carlchristian Eckert, Simeon Ehrig, Wen Fu, Ph.D., Alexander Grund, Sebastian Hahn, Anton Helm, Wolfgang Hoehnig, Dr.-Ing. Guido Juckeland, Jeffrey Kelling, Maximilian Knespel, Dr. Remi Lehe, Felix Schmitt, Frank Winkler, Benjamin Schneider, Joseph Schuchart, Conrad Schumann, Stefan Tietze, Marija Vranic, Ph.D., Benjamin Worpitz, Erik Zenker, Sophie Rudat, Sebastian Starke, Alexander Matthes, Kseniia Bastrakova, Bernhard Manfred Gruber, Jakob Trojok, Anton Lebedev, Nils Prinz, Felix Meyer, Lennert Sprenger, Manhui Wang, Maxence Thevenet, Ilja Goethel, Mika Soren Voß, Lei Bifeng, Andrei Berceanu, Felix Meyer, Lennert Sprenger and Nico Wrobel.
Kudos to everyone, mentioned or unmentioned, who contributed further in any way!