October 11, 2012
Oct. 11 — A center based at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) has won a highly competitive $12.25 million grant to develop computer codes to simulate a key component of the plasma that fuels fusion energy. The five-year DOE award could produce software that helps researchers design and operate facilities to create fusion as a clean and abundant source of energy for generating electricity.
The grant comes from the Department's Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) program supported by the DOE Office of Science.
"The DOE grant is terrific for the Laboratory because it allows us to work in the forefront of the simulation of the edge region of fusion plasmas," said PPPL Director Stewart Prager. "This code could go a long way toward modeling and understanding this pivotal region."
The grant will go to PPPL's Center for Edge Physics Simulation (EPSI) headed by C.S. Chang, a principal research physicist at the Laboratory. The award will fund an advanced computer simulation of the complex and turbulent conditions at the edge of the plasma, the hot, electrically charged gas that scientists confine inside magnetic fields in facilities called tokamaks. Controlling the little-understood plasma edge is crucial for maintaining the confinement so that fusion can take place.
The task of confinement has many everyday parallels. "If you want to confine soup, the bowl should not leak, wobble or be broken by the heat," said Chang, who joined PPPL in April, 2011, from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology and the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University.
The EPSI team consists of leading physicists, mathematicians and computer scientists from 11 U.S. research institutions, together with PPPL participants. Collaborating institutions include: DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Brown University; the University of Colorado at Boulder; the University of Texas at Austin; Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; the California Institute of Technology; the University of California at San Diego; Columbia University; Lehigh University; and Rutgers University.
PPPL participants include staff physicists Stephane Ethier, Seung-Hoe Ku, Jianying Lang and Daren Stotler, and postdoctoral fellows Devon Battaglia and Robert Hager.
The EPSI team will work on Titan, a Cray XK6 and one of the world's fastest scientific supercomputers, which is housed at the DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Titan is expected to have a peak performance of more than 20 petaflops—the technical term for a million billion calculations a second. The machine will have the combined power of well over two million home computers and the ability to perform in one day what a single desktop device would take more than 5,000 years to complete. The EPSI team also will work on Hopper, a Cray XE6 supercomputer at the DOE's E.O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
The new computer code will build on software created by a previous Chang-directed center, the Center for Plasma Edge Simulation. The new code will seek to model the harsh pressure, temperature, density and flow conditions that mark the edge of intensely hot fusion plasmas, and cause them to grow unstable, leak from their magnetic confinement and damage tokamak walls.
The EPSI researchers will test their model against data gleaned from actual fusion experiments to see if the model's predictions are accurate. "If the code proves to be validated for all the relevant aspects of today's experiments, then we would have the confidence to project it for the future," Chang said.
The validated model could serve as a guide to developers of next-generation fusion facilities, which will need to confine hot plasmas at temperatures of over 100 million degrees and cope with extreme heat fluxes against their walls. Such facilities include ITER, the huge tokamak that the European Union, the United States and five other countries are building in Cadarache, France. Plans call for ITER to produce 500 million watts of fusion energy for up to 500 seconds by the late 2020s.
Efforts such as the EPSI project will thus serve as a pathway to fusion power.
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory is managed by Princeton University for the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science. DOE's Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit science.energy.gov.
Contributing commentator, Andrew Jones, offers a break in the news cycle with an assessment of what the national "size matters" contest means for the U.S. and other nations...
Read more...
Today at the International Supercomputing Conference in Leipzing, Germany, Jack Dongarra presented on a proposed benchmark that could carry a bit more weight than its older Linpack companion. The high performance conjugate gradient (HPCG) concept takes into account new architectures for new applications, while shedding the floating point....
Read more...
Not content to let the Tianhe-2 announcement ride alone, Intel rolled out a series of announcements around its Knights Corner and Xeon Phi products--all of which are aimed at adding some options and variety for a wider base of potential users across the HPC spectrum. Today at the International Supercomputing Conference, the company's Raj....
Read more...
Jun 18, 2013 |
The world's largest supercomputers, like Tianhe-2, are great at traditional, compute-intensive HPC workloads, such as simulating atomic decay or modeling tornados. But data-intensive applications--such as mining big data sets for connections--is a different sort of workload, and runs best on a different sort of computer.
Read more...
Jun 18, 2013 |
Researchers are finding innovative uses for Gordon, the 285 teraflop supercomputer housed at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) that has a unique Flash-based storage system. Since going online, researchers have put the incredibly fast I/O to use on a wide variety of workloads, ranging from chemistry to political science.
Read more...
Jun 17, 2013 |
The advent of low-power mobile processors and cloud delivery models is changing the economics of computing. But just as an economy car is good at different things than a full size truck, an HPC workload still has certain computing demands that neither the fastest smartphone nor the most elastic cloud cluster can fulfill.
Read more...
Jun 14, 2013 |
For all the progress we've made in IT over the last 50 years, there's one area of life that has steadfastly eluded the grasp of computers: understanding human language. Now, researchers at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) are utilizing a Hadoop cluster on its Longhorn supercomputer to move the state of the art of language processing a little bit further.
Read more...
Jun 13, 2013 |
Titan, the Cray XK7 at the Oak Ridge National Lab that debuted last fall as the fastest supercomputer in the world with 17.59 petaflops of sustained computing power, will rely on its previous LINPACK test for the upcoming edition of the Top 500 list.
Read more...
05/10/2013 | Cleversafe, Cray, DDN, NetApp, & Panasas | From Wall Street to Hollywood, drug discovery to homeland security, companies and organizations of all sizes and stripes are coming face to face with the challenges – and opportunities – afforded by Big Data. Before anyone can utilize these extraordinary data repositories, however, they must first harness and manage their data stores, and do so utilizing technologies that underscore affordability, security, and scalability.
04/15/2013 | Bull | “50% of HPC users say their largest jobs scale to 120 cores or less.” How about yours? Are your codes ready to take advantage of today’s and tomorrow’s ultra-parallel HPC systems? Download this White Paper by Analysts Intersect360 Research to see what Bull and Intel’s Center for Excellence in Parallel Programming can do for your codes.
Join HPCwire Editor Nicole Hemsoth and Dr. David Bader from Georgia Tech as they take center stage on opening night at Atlanta's first Big Data Kick Off Week, filmed in front of a live audience. Nicole and David look at the evolution of HPC, today's big data challenges, discuss real world solutions, and reveal their predictions. Exactly what does the future holds for HPC?
Join our webinar to learn how IT managers can migrate to a more resilient, flexible and scalable solution that grows with the data center. Mellanox VMS is future-proof, efficient and brings significant CAPEX and OPEX savings. The VMS is available today.