systolic arrays - Definition. Was ist systolic arrays
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Was (wer) ist systolic arrays - definition

MINIMUM LENGTH OF A NONCONTRACTIBLE CLOSED CURVE IN A METRIC SPACE
Systole (mathematics); Systolic invariant; Systolic Geometry

Systolic array         
HOMOGENEOUS NETWORK OF TIGHTLY COUPLED DATA PROCESSING UNITS
Super systolic array; KressArray
In parallel computer architectures, a systolic array is a homogeneous network of tightly coupled data processing units (DPUs) called cells or nodes. Each node or DPU independently computes a partial result as a function of the data received from its upstream neighbours, stores the result within itself and passes it downstream.
systolic array         
HOMOGENEOUS NETWORK OF TIGHTLY COUPLED DATA PROCESSING UNITS
Super systolic array; KressArray
<architecture, parallel> (By analogy with the regular pumping of blood by the heart) An arrangement of processors in an array (often rectangular) where data flows synchronously across the array between neighbours, usually with different data flowing in different directions. H. T. Kung and Charles Leiserson publish the first paper describing systolic arrays in 1978 [reference?]. Each processor at each step takes in data from one or more neighbours (e.g. North and West), processes it and, in the next step, outputs results in the opposite direction (South and East). An example of a systolic algorithm might be matrix multiplication. One matrix is fed in a row at a time from the top of the array and is passed down the array, the other matrix is fed in a column at a time from the left hand side of the array and passes from left to right. Dummy values are then passed in until each processor has seen one whole row and one whole column. At this point, the result of the multiplication is stored in the array and can now be output a row or a column at a time, flowing down or accross the array. See also Ruby, SISAL. (1998-07-01)
End-systolic volume         
VOLUME OF BLOOD IN A VENTRICLE AT THE END OF CONTRACTION, OR SYSTOLE, AND THE BEGINNING OF FILLING, OR DIASTOLE
End cystolic volume; End systolic volume; End Systolic Volume
End-systolic volume (ESV) is the volume of blood in a ventricle at the end of contraction, or systole, and the beginning of filling, or diastole.

Wikipedia

Systolic geometry

In mathematics, systolic geometry is the study of systolic invariants of manifolds and polyhedra, as initially conceived by Charles Loewner and developed by Mikhail Gromov, Michael Freedman, Peter Sarnak, Mikhail Katz, Larry Guth, and others, in its arithmetical, ergodic, and topological manifestations. See also a slower-paced Introduction to systolic geometry.