September 16, 2010
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 16 -- Purdue University has received a $2 million grant from the National Science Foundation to upgrade and improve the university's research datacenter, which houses campus supercomputers.
Purdue's datacenter is home to some of the nation's best campus research computer resources for scientific discovery, with two internationally ranked supercomputers, as ranked by www.Top500.org. A third supercomputer, which is named "Rossmann," after Purdue structural biologist Michael Rossmann, was built on Sept. 1 and also is expected to rank in the world's top 500 supercomputers.
Purdue's on-campus supercomputer use increased from 628,000 hours in 2000 to 57.4 million hours in 2008 to 127 million hours in the 2009-2010 fiscal year. With the addition of the Rossmann cluster computer, Purdue expects to deliver more than 200 million supercomputing hours to its faculty in the 2010-2011 fiscal year.
Seven of Purdue's 10 colleges make use of the campus supercomputing resources. Research done on the computers includes work in the areas of atmospheric chemistry and climate change, energy engineering, high-performance electronics nanotechnology, particle physics, and genetics.
John Campbell, associate vice president for academic technologies, said the demand for centrally supported research computing is expected to continue its rapid increase, noting that Purdue received a record $438 million in external research funding in the past fiscal year, which ended July 1. This was a $96 million increase over the previous fiscal year.
"This infrastructure improvement will allow the institution to meet the ongoing needs of our growing faculty research," Campbell said. "We are planning to add new community cluster supercomputers in 2011 and 2012 to meet the demand of our faculty, and this grant will allow us to have a facility that can support that amount of computing power."
The funding will be used to install two new electrical transformers, which will meet the additional power and cooling demands of the new supercomputers, as well as provide redundant power to the facility; currently a loss of power to the facility represents 400,000 hours of lost computing time per day.
In addition to the power improvements, the facility's chilled water-cooling system also will be upgraded.
In 2008 an external review of Purdue's computing infrastructure by the datacenter engineering consulting firm EYP Mission Critical Facilities recommended significant upgrades to Purdue's facility. However, the report also stated that "Purdue's extensive capability to share research computing systems throughout the Purdue University environment is the best implementation of research systems utilization that EYP-MCF has seen to date."
In addition to supporting campus research activities, the Purdue datacenter also provides computing support to the National Science Foundation's TeraGrid, the Open Science Grid and the Purdue-led DiaGrid.
-----
Source: Steve Tally, Purdue University
There are 0 discussion items posted.
|
Join the Discussion |
NVIDIA is telling everyone that the GK110, its new Kepler GPU aimed at supercomputing, is all about improving performance per watt. But the other driving theme behind the new architecture is reducing the GPU's reliance on its CPU host. How well it accomplishes both these goals areas could determine the success of the new chip in high performance computing.
Read more...
PGI, Cray, and CAPS enterprise are moving quickly to get their new OpenACC-supported compilers into the hands of GPGPU developers. At NVIDIA's GPU Technology Conference this week, there was plenty of discussion around the new HPC accelerator framework, and all three OpenACC compiler makers, as well as NVIDIA, were talking up the technology.
Read more...
NVIDIA has introduced its first Kepler-generation GPU product for high performance computing, and revealed some of the inner working of the new architecture. The announcement took place at the kickoff of the company's GPU Technology Conference taking place this week in San Jose, California.
Read more...
May 23, 2012 |
Computational biologists tweak PageRank to correlate protein markers with disease progression.
Read more...
May 22, 2012 |
Company looks to renewable energy to power its computing infrastructure.
Read more...
May 16, 2012 |
Chief scientist discusses memory stacks, interconnects, and US technology leadership.
Read more...
May 15, 2012 |
GPU maker conjures up visualization technology for virtual desktops.
Read more...
May 14, 2012 |
Pessimistic predictions about technology have a poor track record, according to 451's John Barr.
Read more...