George Mason University Speeds Research and Collaboration With Government Labs Using SGI Technology
10 Outubro 2005 - 11:01AM
PR Newswire (US)
Powered by SGI, GMU School of Computational Sciences Builds
High-Performance Computing Center to Greatly Improve Time to
Solution MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Oct. 10 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ --
To run highly complex calculations in areas as diverse as bioagent
dispersion, climate modeling and prediction, and hemodynamics (a
branch of physiology that deals with the circulation of the blood),
George Mason University's School of Computational Sciences has
selected scalable computing technology and storage solutions from
Silicon Graphics (NYSE:SGI) as the foundation of a three-year
initiative to build a high-performance computing center. As
previously announced in the customer highlights for the fourth
quarter, the driving factor behind the SGI(R) Altix(R) and SGI(R)
InfiniteStorage purchase is GMU's goal to teach and empower
research as well as enhance their wide-spread collegiate
collaboration with other leading universities and institutions and
government laboratories, many of which have SGI Altix systems.
"Having an Altix system will allow us to get our young professors
and our new ideas and innovation moving in exciting new
directions," said Dr. Paul Schopf, assistant dean for research of
the School of Computational Sciences and professor of oceanography,
George Mason University. "We are a school of computational
sciences, which means that we want answers to scientific questions.
Time to solution from the concept, to the coding, to data
management and the delivery of results, is our key metric. The SGI
Altix and InfiniteStorage speeds up everything." Headed by Dr.
Menas Kafatos, Dean, the School of Computational Sciences
collaborates with leading institutions including Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, the National Institute of Standards and
Technology, Los Alamos National Laboratory, the Naval Research Lab,
and a number of Department of Defense labs. Faculty also use
compute resources at NASA Ames' Project Columbia, a
10,240-processor SGI Altix system and NASA Goddard, which has a
1,240-processor SGI Altix with a 440TB SAN solution as well. All
Altix systems run the Linux(R) operating environment on Intel(R)
Itanium(R) 2 processors. GMU Research Highlights The new and
ongoing research the SGI Altix will be running at GMU's School of
Computational Sciences includes these, and many other areas. --
Bioagent Dispersion Simulation. To study contaminant transport
requires intense grid calculations. Simulations are made of
midtown/downtown areas to predict where a potential cloud of
poisonous material goes in the first 10 minutes after release. The
simulations are done to answer vital first responder questions and
improve community preparedness. The calculations involve almost
infinite variables: What are the actual physics of each
environment? What is the difference in the physics of bioagent
dispersion in a street canyon environment like New York as compared
to an open city like Salt Lake City? Weather patterns and
temperatures at different times of year, wind directions, turbulent
content of the flow, whether the walls have been heated because it
was a sunny day, what is the effect of air conditioning-all need to
be mathematically calculated with different variables and different
possible contaminants. -- Climate Dynamics and Climate Modeling.
The faculty collaborates with NASA, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and NSF on climate modeling and
prediction, such as El Nino forecasting, and seasonal to decadal
climate forecasting. The School is heavily involved in multi-model
ensembling for climate forecasting and they will use the SGI Altix
to pre-stage calculations on a variety of popular modeling
programs. GMU faculty associated with the Center for
Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies (COLA) have just recently been
awarded a large grant from NASA's Modeling And Prediction (MAP)
program, in which the climate dynamics faculty, using the SGI
Altix, will collaborate with NASA Goddard on developing the new
GEOS5 climate model. -- Hemodynamics. In an unusual application of
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), a patient's radiological image
data (CAT scans, MRIs, angio, etc.) is used to understand the flow
patterns in veins and arteries using fluid dynamics codes. These
simulations serve as a basis for pre- and post-operative planning
as well as a fundamental research environment to understand the
clinical relevance of flow patterns in the pathogenesis of arterial
diseases. This will allow surgeons to simulate clamps or stents or
other surgical procedures and to check and evaluate blood flow and
the supply of oxygen to the organ, other organs, or the entire
body. Simulation can alert the surgeon to possible problems, and
pre-planning can reduce operating time, which in turn reduces
patient trauma and speeds recovery. -- Molecular Dynamics. The
assembly of Alzheimer's polypeptides into fibrils is being
simulated in the lab. Understanding how small proteins gather into
clusters (fibrils) associated with diseases may lead to discoveries
of how to slow or halt the formations. "We did an extensive
comparison, a bidding process, and we found that the Altix had the
flexibility to allow us to run all of the applications for all of
our different disciplines," added Dr. Schopf. "And, we are finding
that the ability to share codes with our colleagues, codes that may
have come from a shared memory configuration, a message-passing
paradigm, or whatever, all the codes are quite easy to bring to the
Altix. And that's a big value to us and to our collaborative
partners." Other disciplines that will be using the SGI Altix
system include: Hydrodynamics, focusing on designing naval ships
and oil rigs to withstand highly turbulent seas; Cellular Modeling,
to improve the understanding of heart disease; and Complex
Explosion Analysis, to explore air flows and materials impacts in
analysis of terrorist scenarios. Additional areas include space
sciences, computer design of materials and fluids, including
nanotechnology, and hazardous release modeling. SGI Altix and
InfiniteStorage Scalability is Key to GMU's HPC Center "The
important thing about the Altix that distinguishes it from other
machines is the fact that it's a shared-memory machine," said Dr.
Rainald Lohner, professor of computational sciences and
informatics, and dean of fluids and materials research, School of
Computational Sciences, George Mason University. "In my group, we
do very complex multidisciplinary problems, such as fluids combined
with structures, and it becomes very difficult to do them on a
distributed memory machine. It was also important to have Linux
because we all use Linux in the academic community at large." GMU
purchased a SGI(R) Altix(R) 3700 Bx2 supercomputer, powered by 64
Intel Itanium 2 processors with 128GB of memory and 2.3TB of disk
storage, supported by a 10TB SGI(R) InfiniteStorage TP9300 with
multiple 400GB Serial ATA drives for direct-attached storage. "With
research areas ranging from individual patient diagnostics to
homeland security preparedness, the breadth of applications for
which George Mason University uses their SGI Altix system is truly
staggering, and is only possible because of SGI's shared-memory
architecture. The ability of the Altix system to perform optimally
with many different programming paradigms enables many projects to
share the Altix's computational power; and to focus the entire
capability of the system on a single application when it is being
staged for larger runs on supercomputers such as NASA's Project
Columbia," said Dave Parry, senior vice president and general
manager, Server and Platform Group, SGI. "The goal of any
university is to provide the best teaching tools possible to enable
students and research faculty to excel. We are pleased that GMU has
chosen SGI technology as one of those tools in its quest to
continually elevate GMU and the School of Computational Sciences to
new levels of multi-disciplinary learning and collaboration." As
part of the three-year initiative, Research 1, a new research
building for the School of Computational Sciences at GMU is
currently under construction. The new 64-processor SGI Altix and
10TB SGI InfiniteStorage TP9300, purchased through James River
Technical, Inc., a value-added SGI Channel Partner, will be
reinstalled at the new building. Also in the near future, GMU will
join the National LambdaRail project, a high-speed fiber network
sometimes referred to as Internet 3 and exclusive to participating
research institutions and universities. The grand opening of
Research 1 is expected next summer. About George Mason University
George Mason University is an innovative, entrepreneurial
institution with national distinction in a range of academic
fields. Enrollment now tops 28,000, with students in 144 degree
programs at campuses in Arlington, Fairfax and Prince William,
Virginia. In fall 2006, George Mason opens a campus in
Ras-Al-Khaimah (RAK), located in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
George Mason University can be found on the Web at
http://www.gmu.edu/. SILICON GRAPHICS | The Source of Innovation
and Discovery(TM) SGI, also known as Silicon Graphics, Inc., is a
leader in high-performance computing, visualization and storage.
SGI's vision is to provide technology that enables the most
significant scientific and creative breakthroughs of the 21st
century. Whether it's sharing images to aid in brain surgery,
finding oil more efficiently, studying global climate, providing
technologies for homeland security and defense or enabling the
transition from analog to digital broadcasting, SGI is dedicated to
addressing the next class of challenges for scientific, engineering
and creative users. With offices worldwide, the company is
headquartered in Mountain View, Calif., and can be found on the Web
at http://www.sgi.com/. NOTE: Silicon Graphics, SGI, Altix, the SGI
cube and the SGI logo are registered trademarks and The Source of
Innovation and Discovery is a trademark of Silicon Graphics, Inc.,
in the United States and/or other countries worldwide. Intel and
Itanium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel
Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other
countries. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in
several countries. All other trademarks mentioned herein are the
property of their respective owners. DATASOURCE: Silicon Graphics,
Inc. CONTACT: Marla Robinson of Silicon Graphics, Inc.,
+1-256-773-2371, or Web site: http://www.gmu.edu/ Web site:
http://www.sgi.com/
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