ExaHyPE (“An Exascale Hyperbolic PDE Engine”) is a software engine for solving systems of
first-order hyperbolic partial differential equations (PDEs). Hyperbolic PDEs are typically de-
rived from the conservation laws of physics and are useful in a wide range of application areas.
Applications powered by ExaHyPE can be run on a student’s laptop, but are also able to exploit
the thousands of processor cores of state-of-the-art supercomputers. The engine is able to dy-
namically adapt the accuracy of the simulation where needed through adaptive mesh refinement.
Due to the robustness and shock capturing abilities of ExaHyPE’s numerical methods, users of
the engine can simulate linear and non-linear hyperbolic PDEs with very high accuracy. Users
can tailor the engine to their particular PDE by specifying evolved quantities, fluxes, and source
terms. A complete simulation code for a new hyperbolic PDE can often be realised within a few
hours — a task that, traditionally, can take weeks, months, often years for researchers starting
from scratch. In this paper, we showcase ExaHyPE’s workflow and capabilities through real-
world scenarios from our two main application areas: seismology and astrophysics.
«
ExaHyPE (“An Exascale Hyperbolic PDE Engine”) is a software engine for solving systems of
first-order hyperbolic partial differential equations (PDEs). Hyperbolic PDEs are typically de-
rived from the conservation laws of physics and are useful in a wide range of application areas.
Applications powered by ExaHyPE can be run on a student’s laptop, but are also able to exploit
the thousands of processor cores of state-of-the-art supercomputers. The engine is able to dy-
namically adapt the ac...
»