Treffer: Vision for unified micromagnetic modeling (UMM) with Ubermag.

Title:
Vision for unified micromagnetic modeling (UMM) with Ubermag.
Source:
AIP Advances; Jan2024, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-5, 5p
Database:
Complementary Index

Weitere Informationen

Scientists who want to use micromagnetic simulation packages, need to learn how to express the micromagnetic problem of interest in a "language" such as a configuration file, script or GUI-clicks that the simulation software understands. This language varies from software to software. If the researchers need to use another package, they need to learn a new language to re-express their (unchanged) micromagnetic problem for the next software. For research-project specific pre- or post-processing, scientists often need to write additional software. We propose the vision of a unified micromagnetic modeling (UMM) approach with which researchers can express the micromagnetic problem once and from which multiple simulation packages can be instructed automatically to carry out the actual numerical problem solving. Furthermore, by providing defined interfaces that are embedded in the Python data science ecosystem and which are used to communicate with the simulation packages, we can create an open research framework in which simulation runs and additional computation can be arbitrarily combined and orchestrated. Where analysis tools are missing from simulators, these can conveniently be created at Python level. Advantages of this approach include reduced effort for scientists to familiarize themselves with multiple simulation configuration languages, easier exploitation of complementary features of the different simulation packages, the ability to compare results computed with different simulation packages more easily, and the option to easily extend analysis functionality of the existing simulators. With recent updates of Ubermag we present a prototype of such a UMM framework. Ubermag provides a unified interface (expressed in Python) to solve micromagnetic problems using, currently, OOMMF and mumax3. After a simulation has finished, the results are made available to the researcher for analysis within the Python ecosystem of scientific and data science libraries. We discuss the current state of capabilities and challenges associated with the proposed approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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