AND Alan E. Klietz* and Stephen Saroff* Minnesota Supercomputer Center, 1200 Washington Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55415
Aeroelastic applications of the Connection Machine
โ Scribed by Sipcic, Slobodan R. ;Westbrook, Thomas
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 642 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1040-3108
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Massively parallel architectures such as the Connection Machine can process large knowledge bases efficiently. An appropriate knowledge representation scheme for parallel processing is a semantic network. We have defined and implemented software data structures, marker propagation rules, and an inst
combines the best aspects of SIMD (single instruction stream, multiple data stream) and MIMD (multiple instruction stream, multiple data stream) machines . Each processor in the CM-5 executes its own instructions, providing the flexibility of a typical MIMD machine. And, like many MIMD machines, the
In this study, a frequency relation for limit cycle oscillations of a two-degree-of-freedom aeroelastic system with structural non-linearities represented by cubic restoring spring forces is derived. The centre manifold theory is applied to reduce the original system of nine-dimensional "rst order o
Parallel processing via the application of MIMD machines offers the promise of high performance, and experience with parallel processing is accumulating rapidly. This paper briefly surveys recent results from three classes of MIMD machinesshared memory systems, non-shared memory systems, and a dataf