Master's thesis presentation. Ahmad is advised by Keerthi Gaddameedi.
The SCCS Colloquium is a forum giving students, guests, and members of the chair the opportunity to present their research insights, results, and challenges. Do you need ideas for your thesis topic? Do you want to meet your potential supervisor? Do you want to discuss your research with a diverse group of researchers, rehearse your conference talk, or simply cheer for your colleagues? Then this is the right place for you (and you are also welcome to bring your friends along).
Upcoming talks
Ahmad Traboulsi: Space parallelism for shallow water equations on the rotating sphere
SCCS Colloquium |
Shallow Water Equations (SWE) are a simplified form of the 3D Navier-Stokes equations, reduced to two dimensions under the assumption of a shallow fluid layer. The SWEET (Shallow Water Equations Environment for Tests) framework is a high-performance numerical solver used for atmospheric modeling and geophysical fluid dynamics, utilizing spectral methods based on spherical harmonics. As a lightweight yet extensible testbed, SWEET enables the exploration of temporal and spatial discretization strategies that can inform the development and optimization of full 3D atmospheric dynamical cores. It supports various time integration methods, including several parallel-in-time techniques such as Parareal, thereby enabling temporal parallelism. In both SWEET and production-level dynamical cores, spatial discretization is crucial for accurately representing fluid motion globally. However, as spatial resolution increases, the associated computational cost grows significantly, often becoming a bottleneck in achieving timely simulation results. Currently, spatial discretization in SWEET benefits from shared-memory parallelism only. This thesis extends SWEET by introducing an MPI-based spatial domain decomposition, which enables concurrent computations across multiple ranks and aims to achieve full space–time parallelism. The resulting hybrid MPI–OpenMP solver was evaluated using the Galewsky benchmark. Accuracy was maintained across all configurations, confirming numerical consistency. However, performance profiling revealed that global spectral transforms (via the SHTns library) dominate total runtime and cannot be distributed across MPI ranks. Consequently, each rank redundantly performs identical transform computations on full grid copies, while the MPI Allgather communication required to synchronize global fields introduces substantial synchronization and waiting time. As a result, the hybrid configurations do not outperform the OpenMP-only baseline, which achieves the best scaling efficiency within a node. These findings highlight the algorithmic limitations of global spectral methods for distributed memory systems and underscore the need for distributed spectral transforms to enhance performance and facilitate the implementation of an efficient communication workflow in future work.
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Contribute a talk
To register and schedule a talk, you should fill the form Colloquium Registration at least four weeks before the earliest preferred date, at the end of a semester typically even earlier reservation is necessary due to a very high influx of presentations. Keep in mind that we only have limited slots, so please plan your presentation early! In special cases, contact colloquium(at)mailsccs.in.tum.de.
Colloquium sessions are now on-campus. We have booked room MI 02.07.023 for SS25 and MI 00.13.054 for WS25/26. You can either bring your own laptop or send us the slides as a PDF ahead of time. The projector only has an HDMI connection, so please bring your own adapters if necessary.
We invite students doing their Bachelor's or Master's thesis, as well as IDP, Guided Research, or similar projects at SCCS to give one 20min presentation to discuss their results and potential future work. The time for this is typically after submitting your final text. Check also with your study program regarding any requirements for a final presentation of your project work.
New: In regular times, we will now have slots for presenting early stage projects (talk time 2-10min). This is an optional opportunity for getting additional feedback early and there is no strict timeline.
Apart from students, we also welcome doctoral candidates and guests to present their projects.
During the colloquium, things usually go as follows:
- 10min before the colloquium starts, the speakers setup their equipment with the help of the moderator. The moderator currently is Ana Cukarska. Make sure to be using an easily identifiable name in the online session's waiting room.
- The colloquium starts with an introduction to the agenda and the moderator asks the speaker's advisor/host to put the talk into context.
- Your talk starts. The scheduled time for your talk is normally 20min with additional 5-10min for discussion.
- During the discussion session, the audience can ask questions, which are meant for clarification or for putting the talk into context. The audience can also ask questions in the chat.
- Congratulations! Your talk is over and it's now time to celebrate! Have you already tried the parabolic slides that bring you from the third floor to the Magistrale?
Do you remember a talk that made you feel very happy for attending? Do you also remember a talk that confused you? What made these two experiences different?
Here are a few things to check if you want to improve your presentation:
- What is the main idea that you want people to remember after your presentation? Do you make it crystal-clear? How quickly are you arriving to it?
- Which aspects of your work can you cover in the given time frame, with a reasonable pace and good depth?
- What can you leave out (but maybe have as back-up slides) to not confuse or overwhelm the audience?
- How are you investing the crucial first two minutes of your presentation?
- How much content do you have on your slides? Is all of it important? Will the audience know which part of a slide to look at? Will somebody from the last row be able to read the content? Will somebody with limited experience in your field have time to understand what is going on?
- Are the figures clear? Are you explaining the axes or any other features clearly?
In any case, make sure to start preparing your talk early enough so that you can potentially discuss it, rehearse it, and improve it.
Here are a few good videos to find out more:
- Simon Peyton Jones: How to Give a Great Research Talk (see also How to Write a Great Research Paper)
- Susan McConnell: Designing effective scientific presentations
- Jens Weller: Presenting Code
Did you know that the TUM English Writing Center can also help you with writing good slides?
Work with us!
Do your thesis/student project in Informatics / Mathematics / Physics: Student Projects at the SCCS.