World's Leading Scientists Study and Preserve Earth Environment With Help From SGI Technology
21 Abril 2005 - 11:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
World's Leading Scientists Study and Preserve Earth Environment
With Help From SGI Technology MIT, UMass Dartmouth, and China
Meteorology Administration Are Latest to Join Global Research
Efforts Powered by SGI MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., April 21
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- As Earth Day 2005 approaches, more
scientists than ever are working to understand our environment and
mankind's impact on it. And today, Silicon Graphics (NYSE:SGI)
announced that scientists at three respected institutions have
joined the ranks of researchers worldwide who rely on SGI(R)
computing, visualization and storage solutions to study and
preserve the planet's resources and ecosystems. Most recently, the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the University of
Massachusetts-Dartmouth (UMass Dartmouth), and the China
Meteorology Administration's Institute of Desert Meteorology Urumqi
recently acquired powerful SGI computing solutions to drive new
discoveries in a range of environmental and atmospheric sciences.
They join a long list of SGI customers pioneering the study of
global warming and the impact of environmental changes on the
Earth. These include Dalhousie University, Israel's Jacob Bluestein
Institute for Desert Research, NASA Ames Research Center, the
University of Minnesota Supercomputing Institute, Oak Ridge
National Laboratory, and the Fleet Numerical Meteorology and
Oceanography Center. At MIT's Department of Earth, Atmospheric and
Planetary Sciences, researcher Chris Hill is working with fellow
scientists at MIT and elsewhere to deploy advanced computing
technology for studying phenomena including ocean circulation,
weather systems, climate dynamics and seismic and mantle processes.
"Studying the Earth system is important to society, but it also
presents fascinating problems in fluid dynamics, physics,
chemistry, geology, hydrology and computer science," said Hill,
whose modeling work in MIT's Program of Atmospheres, Oceans and
Science incorporates a 16-processor SGI(R) Altix(R) server with
80GB of memory, which was installed at MIT in the summer of 2004.
Hill and his team also make extensive use of the 10,240-processor
Columbia Altix supercomputer at NASA Ames Research Center. "To
understand the practical problems the world faces, we first need to
comprehend the underlying, purely scientific problems," Hill said.
"Powerful systems such as SGI Altix allow us to accelerate our
ability to apply basic science to these practical problems. By
handling larger problems all at once, we can get to our results
sooner." In particular, Hill said, Altix servers are "powerful
tools for formally combining simulations and observations to
produce giant brain-scans of the whole plant in unprecedented
detail." In western China, researchers at the Institute of Desert
Meteorology, Urumqi, part of the China Meteorology Administration,
are turning to high-performance SGI technology to develop new
insights in ecological regeneration, sustainable use of natural
resources, and the image of desert areas on global climate change.
SGI servers, visualization systems, and storage area network
solutions were installed in March to give the institute's
researchers dramatic new capabilities in their search for answers
to climate changes and weather patterns in western China and
beyond. By studying certain aspects of desert climates, institute
researchers may discover new truths about global warming and even
gases and glacial-snow meteorology. Achieving those insights
requires numeric analysis and modeling of enormous amounts of
weather data. This makes SGI's high-performance computing,
visualization and storage technologies a vital part of the
institute's work. For researchers at UMass Dartmouth's School for
Marine Science and Technology in New Bedford, Mass., climate
changes in the western North Atlantic Ocean may hold the answers to
how oceanic circulation and biology impact the carbon cycle, the
intricate web of interactions between the biosphere, atmosphere,
oceans and geosphere -- all of them linked by the element that is
the basis of all life on Earth. Until recently, biological data
collected intermittently on ships lacked the duration and
geographic breadth to provide a meaningful context for broad-based
studies in this area. But by comparing circulation models with two
new sources of data -- satellite-based observations and
location-specific data collected within waters located off the
coast of New England -- scientists have a chance to generate new
and useful simulations. An eight-processor SGI Altix system,
installed during June 2004, serves as the compute engine for the
three-year project. "Our existing resources weren't adequate to
produce the high-resolution regional modeling effort we had in
mind," said Jim Bisagni, principal investigator on the project and
associate professor at UMass Dartmouth. "This project involves
assimilating and analyzing huge amounts of data from multiple
sources. Only state-of-the-art technology like the kind provided by
SGI could deliver the performance and architecture we needed to
support our combined data analysis and modeling approach." SGI
computing, visualization and storage solutions are particularly
well suited to scientific applications, due in large part to SGI's
third-generation NUMAflex(TM) architecture. This unique global
shared-memory architecture enables researchers to hold entire data
sets in memory, allowing for faster and more interactive data
analysis, and resulting in more incisive conclusions. 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 NUMAflex and The Source of Innovation
and Discovery is a trademark of Silicon Graphics, Inc., in the
United States and/or other countries worldwide. All other
trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their respective
owners. MEDIA CONTACT Marla Robinson 256-864-3426 SGI PR HOTLINE
650-933-7777 SGI PR FACSIMILE 650-933-0283 DATASOURCE: SGI CONTACT:
Marla Robinson, +1-256-864-3426, or , or SGI PR HOTLINE,
+1-650-933-7777, or SGI PR FACSIMILE, +1-650-933-0283, all of SGI
Web site: http://www.sgi.com/
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