Air Force Research Lab Unveils Newest Supercomputer, ‘Raider,’ with 12 PetaFLOPS Capacity

September 20, 2023

WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio, Sept. 20, 2023 — The Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) is now home to its newest supercomputer, named the Raider. The FY21 technology insertion, or TI-21, system is part of the DOD High Performance Computing Modernization Program. While Raider is housed at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, it also serves as a national resource as the Air Force, Army and Navy each have access to Raider’s supercomputing capabilities.

Credit: U.S. Air Force/Aleah M. Castrejon

The TI-21 system, named in honor of the Doolittle Raiders, can calculate about 12 petaFLOPS, or floating-point operations, per second. In comparison, the previous supercomputer, Thunder, installed in 2015, calculated only 3.1 petaFLOPS, or 3,126,240,000,000,000 floating point operations, per second.

More recently, the Digital Capabilities Directorate placed an order for the next supercomputer, which will be delivered in 2024. The next two systems to be installed are the TI-23 Flyer and TI-23 Raven, which are expected to calculate 14 petaFLOPS of computational capability. The Flyer and Raven will support the unclassified and classified systems, respectively.

“A petaFLOP is a measure used for performance on how fast the machine can actually perform floating point operations,” said Kelly Dalton, technical director at AFRL’s DOD Supercomputer Resource Center, or DSRC. Essentially, a petaFLOP is the speed at which the computer can turn projects. For those in the science and technology, test and evaluation and acquisition engineering communities, this resource is extremely beneficial.

For example, Dalton said, imagine facing the reality that it could take up to five years to complete simulations and run data on a standard computer. The Raider has the potential to take take that five-year project timeline and turn it into about 200 days, according to Dalton. “And if you’re working on a very hot research or acquisition program, that’s a big return on investment,” Dalton said. “Time is money in this world.”

Once the supercomputer is in place, it is on and running 24/7, 365 days a year for up to five to seven years, said Bryon Foster, division chief, AFRL’s Digital Capabilities Directorate. Once installed and ready for use, another supercomputer is ordered, ensuring a replacement is always ready to take over, Foster added.

“These systems are so large, and it takes so much to build them, get them in the building and up and running that there is a continual process,” Foster added. “Sometimes even before the system is running, we’re ordering the next one.”

The purpose of this continual process is to provide AFRL and the DOD with the latest technology, Dalton said.

“We’re trying to position AFRL as the leader in high performance computing, supercomputing for the Air Force, and also for the DOD,” Dalton said. “That’s why it’s important for the community.”

Dalton also added that these machines put the DoD in a prominent position to support U.S. technological advantage over potential adversaries.

Digital Transformation

“The fuel of our digital transformation is our compute capacity,” said AFRL Chief Information Officer and Digital Capabilities Directorate director Alexis Bonnell. “Not every mission of AFRL, the Air Force, Space Force or DOD is appropriate for cloud. Outpacing the adversary often means out-racing them, ensuring our data can move faster, be analyzed more rapidly and gain insight driven advantage to keep the fight unfair.”

Speed and modeling, Foster said, is a large part of the outcome.

“What we’re trying to do with the digital transformation is take some of these workloads that were done in testing … We’re now able to simulate, in which case we can do the testing cheaper, faster,” Foster added. “In some ways, we can do things in simulations that you could never do in a physical testing environment.”

One example is hypersonic vehicles that travel too fast to test on a range.

“You can model a simulation on a supercomputer and get an idea of how the performance is going to be without actually flying it,” Dalton said.

Dalton made it clear that simulations do not replace experimentation and testing, but rather augment them with modeling capabilities. Looking at different technology areas, the supercomputer can be beneficial. Foster said AI models can be fed more data and thus run more simulations and tests.

Accelerate

The DOD has five DSRCs, and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is the largest Air Force DSRC, according to Foster. Because it is a DOD resource, contractors, civilians, military and other organizations with a DOD sponsor all have access to the supercomputer.

“The big thing we use these systems to do is modeling and simulation,” Foster said. “We’re trying to drive shorter timelines and accelerate — we can do higher fidelity in terms of calculations.”

From left: Brian Schafer, deputy division chief, Digital Capabilities Directorate, AFRL; Heather Christoff, chief, Customer Success, Digital Capabilities Directorate, AFRL; and Brad Hackworth, acquisition program manager, Digital Capabilities Directorate, AFRL, stand in front of and discuss the Raider, the directorates newest supercomputer at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. Credit: U.S. Air Force/Aleah M. Castrejon.

Foster explained that the modeling and simulations resulted in a higher level of accuracy. For example, the Navy previously ran simulations at lower levels of accuracy with the hardware they had access to, however, the Raider was able to take the same project from 6 months to 3 weeks.
Dalton expressed the importance of accelerating and providing the best equipment to researchers and engineers to help produce the best equipment for the warfighter.

“We’re trying to help the scientists and engineers do the work faster and with higher fidelity so they can produce superior capabilities for the warfighter,” Dalton said. “In terms of AFRL, we are trying to advance the research being done here.”

With modeling and simulation, the DOD can save years’ worth of time and money in its laboratories, as the supercomputer allows researchers to model different effects before diving into experiments and testing, Dalton added.

Power

“Our ability to apply this compute in-house, on secure networks, with the scale that the biggest and most challenging questions deserve, is why our high-performance computing is a foundational capacity,” Bonnell said.

The average computer can hold about 16-128 processors or computing cores: in comparison, the inside of the Raider houses 189,000.

Foster explained that an average computer is limited in terms of the models it can run and how much processing the systems can enable, but the supercomputer uses all 189,000 processors to work together.

“If you start looking at just the scales, that’s staggering,” Foster said. “If you look at your storage on your hard drive, you’d have maybe a terabyte, we’re talking petabytes on these systems.”

With this amount of storage, Foster said the users can pull in data much faster than has been seen before using an average computer. In terms of enabling AFRL’s scientists and engineers to do their work, Dalton said the investment helps AFRL remain competitive in the digital world.

“This is a tremendous resource that’s out there for them to use anytime,” Dalton said.

About AFRL

The Air Force Research Laboratory, or AFRL, is the primary scientific research and development center for the Department of the Air Force. AFRL plays an integral role in leading the discovery, development and integration of affordable warfighting technologies for our air, space and cyberspace force. With a workforce of more than 12,500 across nine technology areas and 40 other operations across the globe, AFRL provides a diverse portfolio of science and technology ranging from fundamental to advanced research and technology development.


Source: Air Force Research Lab

Subscribe to HPCwire's Weekly Update!

Be the most informed person in the room! Stay ahead of the tech trends with industry updates delivered to you every week!

Qubit Roundup – Quantum Zoo Grows, Rigetti’s QPU Play, Google’s New Algorithm, QuEra’s EC Advance, and More

December 11, 2023

While the IBM Quantum Summit and the QC Ware’s Q2B Silicon Valley conference dominated last week’s news flow, there was no shortage of other quantum news emerging. Here’s brief recap of highlights. Let’s start Read more…

Inside AWS’s Plans to Make S3 Faster and Better

December 10, 2023

As far as big data storage goes, Amazon S3 has won the war. Even among storage vendors whose initials are not A.W.S., S3 is the defacto standard for storing lots of data. But AWS isn’t resting on its laurels with S3, a Read more…

Quantum Market, Though Small, will Grow 22% and Hit $1.5B in 2026

December 7, 2023

Few markets as small as the quantum information sciences market generate as much lively discussion. Hyperion Research pegged the worldwide quantum market at $848 million for 2023 and expects it to reach ~$1.5 billion in Read more…

AMD’s Horsepower-packed MI300X GPU Beats Nvidia’s Upcoming H200

December 7, 2023

AMD and Nvidia are locked in an AI performance battle – much like the gaming GPU performance clash the companies have waged for decades. AMD has claimed its new Instinct MI300X GPU is the fastest AI chip in the worl Read more…

Finding Opportunity in the High-Growth “AI Market” 

December 6, 2023

 “What’s the size of the AI market?” It’s a totally normal question for anyone to ask me. After all, I’m an analyst, and my company, Intersect360 Research, specializes in scalable, high-performance datacenter Read more…

AWS Solution Channel

Shutterstock 2030529413

Reezocar Rethinks Car Buying Using Computer Vision and ML on AWS

Overview

Every car that finds its way to a landfill marks another dent in the fight for a sustainable future. Reezocar, an online hub for buying and selling used cars, has a mission to change this. Read more…

QCT Solution Channel

QCT and Intel Codeveloped QCT DevCloud Program to Jumpstart HPC and AI Development

Organizations and developers face a variety of issues in developing and testing HPC and AI applications. Challenges they face can range from simply having access to a wide variety of hardware, frameworks, and toolkits to time spent on installation, development, testing, and troubleshooting which can lead to increases in cost. Read more…

Imagine a Beowulf Cluster of SuperNODEs …
(They did)

December 6, 2023

Clustering resources for faster performance is not new. In the early days of clustering, the Beowulf project demonstrated that high performance was achievable from commodity hardware. These days, the "Beowulf cluster mem Read more…

Inside AWS’s Plans to Make S3 Faster and Better

December 10, 2023

As far as big data storage goes, Amazon S3 has won the war. Even among storage vendors whose initials are not A.W.S., S3 is the defacto standard for storing lot Read more…

Quantum Market, Though Small, will Grow 22% and Hit $1.5B in 2026

December 7, 2023

Few markets as small as the quantum information sciences market generate as much lively discussion. Hyperion Research pegged the worldwide quantum market at $84 Read more…

Shutterstock 1285747942

AMD’s Horsepower-packed MI300X GPU Beats Nvidia’s Upcoming H200

December 7, 2023

AMD and Nvidia are locked in an AI performance battle – much like the gaming GPU performance clash the companies have waged for decades. AMD has claimed it Read more…

Finding Opportunity in the High-Growth “AI Market” 

December 6, 2023

 “What’s the size of the AI market?” It’s a totally normal question for anyone to ask me. After all, I’m an analyst, and my company, Intersect360 Res Read more…

Imagine a Beowulf Cluster of SuperNODEs …
(They did)

December 6, 2023

Clustering resources for faster performance is not new. In the early days of clustering, the Beowulf project demonstrated that high performance was achievable f Read more…

The IBM-Meta AI Alliance Promotes Safe and Open AI Progress

December 5, 2023

IBM and Meta have co-launched a massive industry-academic-government alliance to shepherd AI development. The new group has united under the AI Alliance banner Read more…

Shutterstock 1336284338

ChatGPT Friendly Programming Languages
(hello-world.llm)

December 4, 2023

 Using OpenAI's ChatGPT to write code is an alluring goal. Describing "what to" solve, but not "how to solve" would be a huge breakthrough in computer programm Read more…

IBM Quantum Summit: Two New QPUs, Upgraded Qiskit, 10-year Roadmap and More

December 4, 2023

IBM kicks off its annual Quantum Summit today and will announce a broad range of advances including its much-anticipated 1121-qubit Condor QPU, a smaller 133-qu Read more…

CORNELL I-WAY DEMONSTRATION PITS PARASITE AGAINST VICTIM

October 6, 1995

Ithaca, NY --Visitors to this year's Supercomputing '95 (SC'95) conference will witness a life-and-death struggle between parasite and victim, using virtual Read more…

SGI POWERS VIRTUAL OPERATING ROOM USED IN SURGEON TRAINING

October 6, 1995

Surgery simulations to date have largely been created through the development of dedicated applications requiring considerable programming and computer graphi Read more…

U.S. Will Relax Export Restrictions on Supercomputers

October 6, 1995

New York, NY -- U.S. President Bill Clinton has announced that he will definitely relax restrictions on exports of high-performance computers, giving a boost Read more…

Dutch HPC Center Will Have 20 GFlop, 76-Node SP2 Online by 1996

October 6, 1995

Amsterdam, the Netherlands -- SARA, (Stichting Academisch Rekencentrum Amsterdam), Academic Computing Services of Amsterdam recently announced that it has pur Read more…

Cray Delivers J916 Compact Supercomputer to Solvay Chemical

October 6, 1995

Eagan, Minn. -- Cray Research Inc. has delivered a Cray J916 low-cost compact supercomputer and Cray's UniChem client/server computational chemistry software Read more…

NEC Laboratory Reviews First Year of Cooperative Projects

October 6, 1995

Sankt Augustin, Germany -- NEC C&C (Computers and Communication) Research Laboratory at the GMD Technopark has wrapped up its first year of operation. Read more…

Sun and Sybase Say SQL Server 11 Benchmarks at 4544.60 tpmC

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- Sun Microsystems, Inc. and Sybase, Inc. recently announced the first benchmark results for SQL Server 11. The result represents a n Read more…

New Study Says Parallel Processing Market Will Reach $14B in 1999

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- A study by the Palo Alto Management Group (PAMG) indicates the market for parallel processing systems will increase at more than 4 Read more…

Leading Solution Providers

Contributors

SC23 Booth Videos

Achronix @ SC23
AMD @ SC23
AWS @ SC23
Altair @ SC23
CoolIT @ SC23
Cornelis Networks @ SC23
CoreHive @ SC23
DDC @ SC23
HPE @ SC23 with Justin Hotard
HPE @ SC23 with Trish Damkroger
Intel @ SC23
Intelligent Light @ SC23
Lenovo @ SC23
Penguin Solutions @ SC23
QCT Intel @ SC23
Tyan AMD @ SC23
Tyan Intel @ SC23
HPCwire LIVE from SC23 Playlist

CORNELL I-WAY DEMONSTRATION PITS PARASITE AGAINST VICTIM

October 6, 1995

Ithaca, NY --Visitors to this year's Supercomputing '95 (SC'95) conference will witness a life-and-death struggle between parasite and victim, using virtual Read more…

SGI POWERS VIRTUAL OPERATING ROOM USED IN SURGEON TRAINING

October 6, 1995

Surgery simulations to date have largely been created through the development of dedicated applications requiring considerable programming and computer graphi Read more…

U.S. Will Relax Export Restrictions on Supercomputers

October 6, 1995

New York, NY -- U.S. President Bill Clinton has announced that he will definitely relax restrictions on exports of high-performance computers, giving a boost Read more…

Dutch HPC Center Will Have 20 GFlop, 76-Node SP2 Online by 1996

October 6, 1995

Amsterdam, the Netherlands -- SARA, (Stichting Academisch Rekencentrum Amsterdam), Academic Computing Services of Amsterdam recently announced that it has pur Read more…

Cray Delivers J916 Compact Supercomputer to Solvay Chemical

October 6, 1995

Eagan, Minn. -- Cray Research Inc. has delivered a Cray J916 low-cost compact supercomputer and Cray's UniChem client/server computational chemistry software Read more…

NEC Laboratory Reviews First Year of Cooperative Projects

October 6, 1995

Sankt Augustin, Germany -- NEC C&C (Computers and Communication) Research Laboratory at the GMD Technopark has wrapped up its first year of operation. Read more…

Sun and Sybase Say SQL Server 11 Benchmarks at 4544.60 tpmC

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- Sun Microsystems, Inc. and Sybase, Inc. recently announced the first benchmark results for SQL Server 11. The result represents a n Read more…

New Study Says Parallel Processing Market Will Reach $14B in 1999

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- A study by the Palo Alto Management Group (PAMG) indicates the market for parallel processing systems will increase at more than 4 Read more…

  • arrow
  • Click Here for More Headlines
  • arrow
HPCwire