Rayleigh is a 3-D convection code designed for the study of dynamo behavior in spherical geometry. It evolves the incompressible and anelastic MHD equations in spherical geometry using a pseudo-spectral approach. Rayleigh employs spherical harmonics in the horizontal direction and Chebyshev polynomials in the radial direction. The code has undergone extensive accuracy testing using the Christensen et al. (2001) Boussinesq benchmarks and the Jones et al. (2011) anelastic benchmarks. Rayleigh has been developed with NSF support through the Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics (CIG).
Rayleigh is a community project that lives by the participation of its members -- i.e., including you! It is our goal to build an inclusive and participatory community so we are happy that you are interested in participating! We have collected a set of guidelines and advice on how to get involved in the community and keep them in the CONTRIBUTING.md file in Rayleigh's repository.
The pseudo-spectral nature of Rayleigh means that its parallelization necessarily relies heavily on global communication patterns. That said, Rayleigh's parallelization is based around a 2-D domain decomposition and large-message-size all-to-alls. These features allow the code to overcome many of the obstacles that traditionally limit the scalability of spectral methods. The end result is a pseudo-spectral code optimized for petascale machines. Rayleigh's pure-MPI mode has demonstrated highly efficient strong scaling on 131,000 cores of the Mira Blue Gene/Q supercomputer for problems with approximately 2048^3 grid points (2048 spherical harmonics). Performance numbers from Mira are shown below. A summary of Rayleigh's performance and how it compares against other popular dynamo codes (albeit at at smaller process counts) may be found in the recent performance benchmark results of Matsui et al. (2016).
The following documents form the Rayleigh documentation.
Document | Description |
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INSTALL | in-depth installation instructions |
https://rayleigh-documentation.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ | A combined online documentation |
https://rayleigh-documentation.readthedocs.io/en/latest/doc/source/diagnostic_codes/qcodes.html | Online tables of Rayleigh output menu codes |
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For questions on the source code of Rayleigh, portability, installation, new or existing features, etc., use the Rayleigh forum. This forum is where the Rayleigh users and developers all hang out.
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Rayleigh is continually being improved by a large, collaborative, and inclusive community. It is primarily developed and maintained by:
- Nicholas Featherstone
- Philipp Edelmann
- Rene Gassmoeller
- Loren Matilsky
- Ryan Orvedahl
- Cian Wilson
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A complete and growing list of the many authors that have contributed over the years can be found at GitHub contributors.
Rayleigh was originally written by Nicholas Featherstone with NSF support through CIG. Please see the ACKNOWLEDGE file for citation information.
Rayleigh is released under the GPL v3 or newer license.