Paper
30 December 1998 Application of parallel computing to a Monte Carlo code for photon transport in turbid media
Alberto Colasanti, Giovanni Guida, Annamaria Kisslinger, Raffaele Liuzzi, Maria Quarto, Patrizia Riccio, Giuseppe Roberti, Fulvia Villani
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Monte Carlo (MC) simulations of photon transport in turbid media suffer a severe limitation represented by very high execution times in all practical cases. This problem could be approached with the technique of parallel computing, which, in principle, is very suitable for MC simulations because they consist in the repeated application of the same calculations to unrelated and superposing events. For the first time in the field of the optical and IR photon transport, we developed a MC parallel code running on the parallel processor computer CRAY-T3E (128 DEC Alpha EV5 nodes, 600 Mflops) at CINECA (Bologna, Italy). The comparison of several single processor runs (on Alpha AXP DEC 2100) and N-processor runs (on Cray T3E) for the same tissue models shows that the computation time is reduced by a factor of about 5*N, where N is the number of used processors. This means a computation time reduction by a factor ranging from about 102 (as in our case) up to about 5*103 (with the most powerful parallel computers) that could make feasible MC simulations till now impracticable.
© (1998) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Alberto Colasanti, Giovanni Guida, Annamaria Kisslinger, Raffaele Liuzzi, Maria Quarto, Patrizia Riccio, Giuseppe Roberti, and Fulvia Villani "Application of parallel computing to a Monte Carlo code for photon transport in turbid media", Proc. SPIE 3566, Photon Propagation in Tissues IV, (30 December 1998); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.334380
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Monte Carlo methods

Photon transport

Parallel computing

Scattering

Absorption

Computer simulations

Tissue optics

Back to Top