Johannes Pahlke ; Ivo F. Sbalzarini - On the Computational Power of Particle Methods

fi:11227 - Fundamenta Informaticae, July 16, 2025, Volume 194, Issue 1 - https://doi.org/10.46298/fi.11227
On the Computational Power of Particle MethodsArticle

Authors: Johannes Pahlke ORCID; Ivo F. Sbalzarini ORCID

We investigate the computational power of particle methods, a well-established class of algorit hms with applications in scientific computing and computer simulation. The computational power of a compute model determines the class of problems it can solve. Automata theory allows describing the computational power of abstract machines (automata) and the problems they can solve. At the top of the Chomsky hierarchy of formal languages and grammars are Turing machines, which resemble the concept on which most modern computers are built. Although particle methods can be interpreted as automata based on their formal definition, their computational power has so far not been studied. We address this by analyzing Turing completeness of particle methods. In particular, we prove two sets of restrictions under which a particle method is still Turing powerful, and we show when it loses Turing powerfulness. This contributes to understanding the theoretical foundations of particle methods and provides insight into the powerfulness of computer simulations.

17 pages, 23 appendix pages


Volume: Volume 194, Issue 1
Published on: July 16, 2025
Accepted on: March 6, 2025
Submitted on: April 21, 2023
Keywords: Formal Languages and Automata Theory, Numerical Analysis

Publications

Is based on
Pahlke, J. ORCID, & Sbalzarini, I. F. ORCID. (2023). A Unifying Mathematical Definition of Particle Methods. In IEEE Open Journal of the Computer Society (Vols. 4, pp. 97-108). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). 10.1109/ojcs.2023.3254466
Has related material
Pahlke, J. ORCID, & Sbalzarini, I. F. ORCID. (2024). Proven Distributed Memory Parallelization of Particle Methods. In ACM Transactions on Parallel Computing (Vols. 11, Issues 4, pp. 1-45). Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). 10.1145/3696189

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