Abstract

The calculation of two and higher-dimension Fast Fourier Transforms (FFT’s) are of great importance in many areas of data analysis and computational physics. The two-dimensional FFT is implemented for a parallel network using a master-slave approach. In-place performance is good, but the use of this technique as an “accelerator” is limited by the communications time between the host and the network. The total time is reduced by performing the host-master communications in parallel with the master-slave communications. Results for the calculation of the two-dimensional FFT of real-valued datasets are presented.

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