February 13, 2012
Edinburgh, U.K., Feb.13 -- Imagine if every person on the planet were able to carry out 250,000 calculations per second simultaneously. This is the combined capability of the next stage of development, announced today, of two giant computers, HECToR and BlueGene/Q, based at the University of Edinburgh’s Advanced Computing Facility (ACF). It marks the next chapter in the UK’s supercomputing program.
The computers can deliver complex computer simulations across a range of scientific disciplines and are funded by four of the UK Research Councils, EPSRC, STFC, NERC and BBSRC. Their increased computing capacity and performance will help UK researchers’ work in forecasting the impact of climate change, the fundamental structure of matter, fluctuations in ocean currents, projecting the spread of epidemics, designing new materials, the structure and evolution of the universe and developing new medicinal drugs.
Launching the new phases at an event jointly hosted by the University of Edinburgh and the UK Research Councils, Minister for Universities and Science, David Willetts, said:
“E-infrastructure is fundamental to modern research and development. It helps our world-leading science base achieve breakthroughs across a range of important disciplines and helps industry design and manufacture new products.
“These impressive new supercomputers will drive growth and innovation. They will provide UK businesses and researchers with the technology they need to compete successfully on a global scale.”
Mr Willetts also presented a plaque to the winner of a schools art competition to produce a design for the front panels of the HECToR computer.
Professor Sir Timothy O’Shea, Principal of the University of Edinburgh, said:
“We are delighted to host the next generation in supercomputing capability for researchers across the UK. HECToR and BlueGene/Q will each play a significant role in facilitating ground-breaking research across many areas of science, with tremendous benefits for society. We look forward to working with our partner organizations in delivering this computing capability and to seeing the contribution it will make.”
Commenting on HECToR Phase 3, which has been funded by a £13.9 million grant from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), which manages the service, Professor David Delpy, Chief Executive, said:
“High Performance Computing is vital to supporting the development of science, discovery and new commercial partnerships. As HPC becomes more powerful, and it is possible to model more complex problems in greater detail, the types of simulation that HECToR is capable of become an increasingly valuable tool.”
Professor John Womersley, Chief Executive Officer of STFC said:
“Supercomputers are the essential, behind-the-scenes tools that enable modern science. Whether you are analyzing climate data from a satellite, designing a new medicine or looking for the Higgs boson, access to high performance computers is vital. These new computers will undoubtedly facilitate breakthroughs across the scientific disciplines, and lead to additional economic and societal benefits for the UK.”
Also announced at the launch was the winner of a schools art competition to design a pictorial representation of the work carried out by HECToR. The winning picture has been placed on the front panels of the computer.
The winner, sixteen-year-old Lily Johnson, from Hethersett Old Hall School near Norwich, said:
“I entered the HECToR design competition at the suggestion of my chemistry teacher, Miss Mann. After reading about the capabilities of the supercomputer I wanted to represent these in my design.
“The rain, cloud and sun represent mapping weather patterns and climate change, the volcano the prediction of natural disasters, the syringe and tablets the computer’s application in medical advances, the leaf the advancing of understanding complex biological systems and the aeroplane the computer’s role in improving engineering of aircraft.
“I put these around a globe as the work of the computer has global benefits. All the pictures are colored in binary code to show how the technology links them all together.
“I am very honored that my design has been chosen for the computer, as its work will be influential in so many fields. It is an amazing next technological step in the important issues affecting our lives, such as climate change.”
Both the BlueGene/Q and HECToR facilities have approximately the same computational performance, 800 Teraflops (800 million million million million). HECToR has a memory of 90 Terabytes – equivalent to that of over 180,000 iPhones. It also has one Petabyte of disk space for storing data. If your iPhone had that much space it could hold 200 million tracks, and if you started listening to each one of them in 2012, you would still be listening in 3153.
The BlueGene/Q design achieves a very high concentration of computing power in a small space and is the most energy efficient supercomputer ever built. Using just the electricity it takes to power a light bulb it can perform the calculations of 100 laptops.
About HECToR
HECToR (High-End Computing Terascale Resources) is the UK’s largest, fastest and most powerful supercomputer. It is capable of over 800 million million calculations a second that’s over 114,000 calculations a second for every man, woman and child on Earth.
The HECToR facility is funded by Department for Business, Innovation and Skills’ (BIS), EPSRC, The Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), emphasizing the breadth of science supported and has evolved in three phases since 2008.
HECToR phase 3 has been funded by a £13.9 million EPSRC grant.
The software and hardware used has been upgraded and increased since phase 1 and technical details are available at
http://www.hector.ac.uk/service/software/
http://www.hector.ac.uk/service/hardware/
HECToR’s objectives are:
HECToR phase 3 uses the latest “Bulldozer” multicore processor architecture from AMD which theoretically allows twice the performance over the old architecture used in phase 2b. Learning to exploit these new architectures will place the UK at the forefront of scientific software development.
The EPSRC is the managing agent for the HECToR service on behalf of Research Councils UK (RCUK).
The facility has been delivered by the HECToR Partners (UoE HPCX Ltd, NAG Ltd, University of Edinburgh, Cray Inc and STFC’s Daresbury Laboratory), a consortium of organizations with international standing and many years of experience in this field.
About BlueGene/Q
BlueGene/Q is the most energy efficient supercomputer ever built. It can perform the calculation of 100 laptops using the same level of electricity used to power a lightbulb. It has been top of the Green500 ranking since November 2010.
The University of Edinburgh BlueGene/Q computer chip is the result of a unique knowledge transfer and industrial partnership activity with IBM. It is part of the Science and Technology Facilities Council’s DiRAC facility that provides specialized advanced HPC capability for some of the world’s most complicated scientific problems in astronomy and particle physics.
The machine will allow UK particle physicists to provide precise theoretical input, needed in their search for new physics on high energy particle experiments such as the Large Hadron Collider. It focuses on solving the theory of the strong nuclear force to understand the properties of the bound states of quarks and gluons that form familiar particles like the proton and neutron in the atomic nucleus.
Providing early access to the machine gives the UK the edge in exploiting this new technology for science. This year BlueGene/Q will be upgraded to a 1.26Pflops/s combined system (1 Pflop is 1000 teraflops) making it one of the fastest computers in Europe and giving the UK a world-leading simulation capability matching those of our US and Japanese competitors.
-----
Source:EPCC
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 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...
May 10, 2012 |
DRAM manufacturers gear up for DDR4.
Read more...