2002
DOI: 10.1006/jcph.2001.6943
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A Performance Comparison of Tree Data Structures for N-Body Simulation

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Cited by 18 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…He concludes that a spatially balanced 6 k − d tree will provide performance superior to that of a BH tree. In contrast, Waltz et al (2002) compare a BH tree to a k − d tree in direct code to code tests but make the opposite conclusion that BH trees ordinarily provide superior performance to k − d trees.…”
Section: What Kind Of Tree Is the Best?mentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…He concludes that a spatially balanced 6 k − d tree will provide performance superior to that of a BH tree. In contrast, Waltz et al (2002) compare a BH tree to a k − d tree in direct code to code tests but make the opposite conclusion that BH trees ordinarily provide superior performance to k − d trees.…”
Section: What Kind Of Tree Is the Best?mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…However, neither the Anderson (1999) nor the Waltz et al (2002) studies discuss the relative costs of traversal and evaluation in any detail and further, it is not clear that their results are generalizable. For example, few codes in common use implement the comparatively costly "priority queue" node opening strategy of Salmon & Warren (1994), as Waltz et al (2002) do. Also, Waltz et al (2002) make their comparisons to density balanced k − d trees, while 6 In Anderson's nomenclature, density balancing is defined by the criterion described in the last section, that nodes at each level contain equal numbers of particles.…”
Section: What Kind Of Tree Is the Best?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The first category is tree-like method, such as hierarchical tree [23], binary tree and Barnes-Hut tree [24] and the tree-code [25]. In the tree-code a cube of side l enclosing all particles is subdivided into eight cubic boxes with each of them further subdivided into eight children boxes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%