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Supercomputer 'Jaguar' Making Headway

Supercomputer 'Jaguar' Making Headway
The Knoxville News Sentinel - 04/04/05 5:00 AM PT

With its current 20-cabinet configuration, "Jaguar" is expected to be capable of 10 trillion calculations per second, or 10 teraflops. Tests over the next couple of weeks will confirm that. Another 20 cabinets are due May 2, raising the performance level to 20 trillion calculations per second.
Big orange and white cabinets that will form one of the world's fastest supercomputers for open science research are arriving at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tenn.
The high-performance units are part of a new Cray Corp. XT3 supercomputer, nicknamed "Jaguar," that could be reaching record speed before year's end.
Nine cabinets arrived last week, bringing the total to 20, and there could be another 100 on the way in the months ahead.
The orange and white color scheme is no accident. They are the school colors of the University of Tennessee, which jointly manages the Department of Energy facility with Battelle Memorial Institute.

Super Processing Power
"We actually got the color swatch off the UT Web site," said Mark Dobbs, who works at the lab's Center for Computational Sciences.
With its current 20-cabinet configuration, Jaguar is expected to be capable of 10 trillion calculations per second, or 10 teraflops. Tests over the next couple of weeks will confirm that.
Another 20 cabinets are due May 2, raising the performance level to 20 trillion calculations per second. In late June, the total number of cabinets will grow to 56, with a peak speed of about 25 teraflops.
If funding becomes available, the lab and Cray are planning to rapidly scale up Jaguar to 120 cabinets before Sept. 30, when the current federal fiscal year ends.
That setup would drive the power up to 100 teraflops, or 100 trillion calculations per second, and make Jaguar the fastest machine available for unclassified scientific uses. It would have the processing power of 50,000 personal computers.

Super Processing Power
"That is the goal," Robert Silvia, the lab's group leader for high-performance computing operations.
By comparison, DOE's National Nuclear Security Administration announced last week that its IBM BlueGene/L supercomputer, used to maintain the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile without nuclear testing, achieved 135.3 trillion calculations per second, making it the fastest supercomputer in the world. And it's still only halfway installed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.Meanwhile in Oak Ridge, another Cray system, an X1 nicknamed "Phoenix," also is being upgraded. This system is particularly suited for scientific studies of global climate change and nuclear fusion, while the Jaguar is supposed to be best for research on materials, nanoscience and biology.

Joining Technologies
Cray and the lab are hoping to "marry" the technologies of both systems into a next-generation machine, to be called "Rainier," that could deliver 250 teraflops, or 250 trillion calculations per second, in 2007.
"Everything that's important to Oak Ridge, we should be able to do on that new machine out in 2007," Silvia said. "By that time, we will have the codes and the science applications running well enough to take advantage of that (speed). Because we're still learning on these machines."
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[Edit 1 times, last edit by Former Member at Apr 4, 2005 7:43:32 PM]
[Apr 4, 2005 7:39:17 PM]   Link   Report threatening or abusive post: please login first  Go to top 
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Re: Supercomputer 'Jaguar' Making Headway

All i can say Graham isWOW!!!
[Apr 5, 2005 9:37:10 AM]   Link   Report threatening or abusive post: please login first  Go to top 
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Re: Supercomputer 'Jaguar' Making Headway

..and down on the street people are making progress - in their own back yards!!! Check this out. The numbers are not impressive, but it sure looks cool - read the article - the guy built it from original Mustang parts!!!!!

http://www.daveinci.com/pages/15/

biggrin biggrin biggrin
[May 22, 2005 11:27:47 AM]   Link   Report threatening or abusive post: please login first  Go to top 
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Re: Supercomputer 'Jaguar' Making Headway

..and down on the street people are making progress - in their own back yards!!! Check this out. The numbers are not impressive, but it sure looks cool - read the article - the guy built it from original Mustang parts!!!!!

http://www.daveinci.com/pages/15/

biggrin biggrin biggrin


Great link, Rob. biggrin



A computer in a 289. Now this is art. cool
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QCDOC supercomputer in Edinburgh

Here is an interesting supercomputer article: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/06/050607011135.htm

Source: University Of Liverpool
Date: 2005-06-18

Liverpool Scientists Help To Solve The Mysteries Of Quarks

Liverpool, UK -- Particle physicists are embarking on a new attempt to solve the mysteries of quarks with the completion of the three most powerful supercomputers ever applied to this problem, including one in Edinburgh which scientists at the University of Liverpool helped to design and build.

[image omitted]

Quarks are the fundamental particles that make up 99.9% of ordinary matter; yet it is impossible to examine a single quark in the laboratory. Consequently, some of the basic properties of quarks are not known, such as their precise masses or why they exist in six different types.

Quarks are bound together by the Strong Force, which is weak when the quarks are close, but increases steadily as you try to separate them, making it impossible to isolate a single quark. Instead, the theory describing the Strong Force, called Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), has to be simulated on huge computers.

The Edinburgh computer is the first of three similar machines and has been operating since January 2005. Liverpool hosts a 10 Terabyte data grid node as part of the project and was responsible for coordination of the UKQCD physics software effort by means of a PPARC funded Software Manager and a physicist programmer.

Professor Alan Irving, Head of Mathematical Sciences at the University of Liverpool, and a member of the UK's Programme Management Committee for the project, said: "The successful inauguration of this computer shows what can be achieved when the imagination and commitment of pure scientists is combined with industrial capability and backed by a risk-taking Research Council. The next part of the project, the physics exploitation, promises to be even more exciting than the first."

The second computer is being inaugurated today at the RIKEN Brookhaven Research Center in Brookhaven National Laboratory in the USA. The third is part of the U.S. Department of Energy Program in High Energy and Nuclear Physics, and is also installed at Brookhaven where it is currently undergoing testing.

The computers are built with processing chips specifically designed for the purpose, known as QCD-on-a-chip, or QCDOC for short. A little slower than the microprocessor in a laptop, the QCDOC chip was designed to consume a tenth of the electrical power, so that tens of thousands of them could be put into a single machine.

Each QCDOC machine operates at a speed of 10 Teraflops, or 10 trillion (i.e. million million) floating point operations per second. By comparison, a regular desktop computer operates at a few Gigaflops (a thousand million floating point operations per second), whilst IBM's BlueGene, a close relative of QCDOC and the fastest computer in the world, operates at over 100 Teraflops. Edinburgh's machine and part of the QCDOC development costs were funded through a Joint Infrastructure Fund Award of £6.6million administered by the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council, who also fund the UK scientists in this field.

Notes for Editors

The Mysteries of Quarks

· Quarks never appear singly, but always as bound states of two or more, called hadrons, such as the protons and neutrons that make up the atomic nucleus. Thus, Nature hides its fundamental particles and we would like to understand better how the Strong Force achieves this.

· Only the mass of the top quark is accurately known, because QCD effects are small for such a heavy particle. To determine the masses of the lighter quarks accurately (called up, down, strange, charm and bottom), QCD effects have to be computed. These masses are needed for detailed understanding of many phenomena and should eventually be predicted by the much sought after Theory of Everything.

· There are six types of quark and this seems to be related to the small difference between matter and antimatter, called CP violation, that may help to explain why our Universe is dominated by matter (and hence why we can exist at all). QCD simulations are needed to discover whether our current theories can explain this, or there is some new physics at work.

· The Theory of Everything is very likely to permit protons to decay. If so, the proton lifetime must be enormous, since no decay has yet been observed. Experimental lower bounds on the lifetime, together with QCD simulations, place restrictions on what the Theory of Everything can be and have already ruled out some candidates.

· At enormously high temperatures and densities, such as may be found in neutron stars, everyday matter made of bound quarks may melt into a new type of matter. This change of phase, which is being searched for at Brookhaven National Laboratory by colliding gold and lead nuclei at high energies, is accessible to QCD simulations. What happens may tell us about what is going on inside some of the most exotic objects in the Universe.

The UKQCD Collaboration

UKQCD is a collaboration of particle physicists from the Universities of Edinburgh, Southampton, Swansea, Liverpool, Glasgow, Oxford and Cambridge. It was formed in 1989 and has exploited a series of novel architecture computers for QCD simulations, becoming one of the leading projects in this field world wide. QCDOC gives UKQCD for the first time the fastest computer in the world available for QCD simulations.

The University of Liverpool

The University of Liverpool is one of the UK's leading research institutions. It attracts collaborative and contract research commissions from a wide range of national and international organisations valued at more that £90 million annually.

Editor's Note:
The original news release can be found at http://www.liv.ac.uk/newsroom/press_releases/2005/05/quark.htm

This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University Of Liverpool.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Adding my own comments - most of the mass of the proton [for example] is NOT due to the rest mass of the quarks in it but to their relativistic mass plus the mass of the gluon force particles binding them together at near light speed. Because the chromodynamic force is so strong though quarks are small, supplying enough energy to break the bond between quarks simply creates more quarks. Therefore, current theory says that we will never observe an isolated quark. [Unless you consider an electron to be a chromodynamically neutral quark.] Since all our measurements of their rest mass are very indirect, our mass estimates do not have much precision.

mycrofth
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Re: Supercomputer 'Jaguar' Making Headway

very cool!, thats "supercomputer" is a "big Xbox" je je je


greetings...
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smile Re: Supercomputer 'Jaguar' Making Headway

my 2p worth

Top 500

You will notice that it is dominated by IBM cool

CtW
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Re: Supercomputer 'Jaguar' Making Headway

cool!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Hydra wins chess tournament 5.5 - 0.5

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