On the performance of exponential integrators for problems in magnetohydrodynamics
Lukas Einkemmer, Mayya Tokman, John Loffeld

TL;DR
This paper evaluates exponential integrators for large-scale magnetohydrodynamics problems, demonstrating their potential for significant computational savings over traditional methods in simulating plasma phenomena.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive performance comparison of exponential integrators with implicit methods for large MHD systems, highlighting their advantages in computational efficiency.
Findings
Exponential integrators outperform or match implicit methods in most tested scenarios.
Performance gains are consistent across various plasma parameters and architectures.
Further development of exponential methods for MHD is justified based on these results.
Abstract
Exponential integrators have been introduced as an efficient alternative to explicit and implicit methods for integrating large stiff systems of differential equations. Over the past decades these methods have been studied theoretically and their performance was evaluated using a range of test problems. While the results of these investigations showed that exponential integrators can provide significant computational savings, the research on validating this hypothesis for large scale systems and understanding what classes of problems can particularly benefit from the use of the new techniques is in its initial stages. Resistive magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) modeling is widely used in studying large scale behavior of laboratory and astrophysical plasmas. In many problems numerical solution of MHD equations is a challenging task due to the temporal stiffness of this system in the parameter…
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