Abstract
The Multilevel Fast Multipole Algorithm (MLFMA) has known applications in scientific modeling in the fields of telecommunications, physics, mechanics, and chemistry. Accelerating calculation of far-field using GPUs and GPU clusters for large-scale problems has been studied for more than a decade. The acceleration of the Near Field Computation (P2P operator) however was less of a concern because it does not face the challenges of distributed processing which does far field. This article proposes a modification of the P2P algorithm and uses performance models to determine its optimality criteria. By modeling the speedup, we found that making threads independence by creating redundancy in the data makes the algorithm for lower dense problems nearly 13 times faster than non-redundant mode.