SGI Provides Scientists With Unique HPC, Visualization and Storage Solutions to Analyze, Understand and Predict Meteorology and
10 Janeiro 2005 - 12:12PM
PR Newswire (US)
SGI Provides Scientists With Unique HPC, Visualization and Storage
Solutions to Analyze, Understand and Predict Meteorology and
Climate Variability and Changes SGI Altix Supercomputers and SGI
InfiniteStorage Systems Enable Major Meteorological Research Around
the World SAN DIEGO, 85th American Meteorological Society Annual
Meeting, Booth 90, Jan. 10 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- As scientists
meet to consider the 2005 AMS theme of "Building the Earth
Information System" and the role that science can play in
decision-making for society, Silicon Graphics (NYSE:SGI) today
announced its continued commitment to providing an unprecedented
blend of high-performance computing, visualization and storage
solutions that consistently drive global innovations in meteorology
and climatology, including research and forecasting. SGI delivers
innovative technology to researchers and scientists employed in the
study of such phenomena as climate change, tsunami, ozone
depletion, environmental impacts in urban planning, groundwater
pollution, and the improvement of severe event and climate
forecasting. Beyond weather prediction modeling, SGI solutions
support satellite and radar image processing and data management
solutions for the terabytes of data managed in this industry, plus
air and water quality modeling. SGI Activities at AMS The SGI(R)
Mobile Innovation Center (MIC), a state-of-the-art customized
18-wheel truck equipped with SGI's latest technology solutions will
be featured at AMS. Equipped with the compute and storage capacity
required to process and analyze data equivalent to a 100 years of
worldwide climate data, this rolling corporate briefing center and
demonstration facility also features a 20 seat SGI(R) Reality
Center(R) immersive visualization facility onboard. On Sunday, SGI
co-sponsored AMS Weatherfest, an annual education and community
outreach event to introduce university and under-graduate students
and parents to the amazing world of meteorology and weather; the
Mobile Innovation Center was open to the public. Monday through
Wednesday, the Center will also serve as a conference room
featuring presentations and demonstrations from many important
innovators in meteorology who rely on SGI high-performance
computing for their research; the MIC is open house all day
Thursday. On Monday, the MIC will host an invitation-only luncheon
for the World Meteorological Organization; Dr. Tsengdar Lee,
Information Systems Specialist, NASA Headquarters, Science Mission
Directorate, will speak about the development of next generation
weather and climate modeling technologies on NASA's Columbia
supercomputer. On Tuesday, Dr. Bob Atlas, NASA/Goddard Space Flight
Center will also discuss NASA's Columbia at a VIP luncheon. NASA's
Columbia is the result of a 15-week effort with SGI, NASA and Intel
to build and successfully install one of the world's most powerful
supercomputers. The 10,240-processor Columbia supercomputer is
fully deployed at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) facility
located at Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California. The
Columbia supercomputer, built from 20 SGI(R) Altix(R) systems, each
powered by 512 Intel(R) Itanium(R) 2 processors, promises to
revolutionize the rate of scientific discovery at NASA. For
instance, on NASA's previous supercomputers, simulations showing
five years worth of changes in ocean temperatures and sea levels
were taking a year to model. But using a single SGI Altix system,
scientists can simulate decades of ocean circulation in just days,
while producing simulations in greater detail than ever before. The
history-making supercomputer also incorporates an SGI(R)
InfiniteStorage solution that gives NASA access to 440 terabytes of
data, an amount 44 times larger than the entire U.S. Library of
Congress print collection. SGI Featured Speakers at AMS Featured
speakers and topics open to all AMS attendees include: -- Dr. David
Barkai, HPC Computational Architect, Intel Technologies for
Numerical Weather Simulations -- Dr. Eric Frost, Geological
Sciences, Co-Director, SDSU Visualization Center Collaborative
interaction with real time data sets; Using sensor networks and
high end visualization for decision support. -- Dr. Gerardo
Cisneros, Scientist, SGI "High-Performance Computing at SGI and the
Status of Climate and Weather Codes on SGI Altix" -- Dr. David P.
Bacon and Dr. Ananthakrishna SarmaCenter for Atmospheric Physics,
SAIC Application of Unstructured Adaptive Grids to Numerical
Weather Prediction -- Dr. Greg Wilson, President, Baron Advanced
Meteorological Systems and Dr. John McHenry, Chief Scientist, Baron
Advanced Meteorological Systems High Performance Real Time
Environmental Forecasts -- Dr. Fred Lewis, IPS MeteoStar and Dr.
Dennis Moon, WindLogic Applications for high resolution weather
forecast modeling SGI Powers Meteorological Research and
Forecasting There are over 100 sites worldwide that specialize in
major meteorological research and forecasting. SGI has a presence
in more than 50% of them. SGI systems are present in most of the
leading North American and European weather institutions and in a
significant share of all forecasting centers. Add to this our
worldwide presence in a large number of environmental research
institutions and the value of SGI systems to this industry is
clear. SGI offers one of the industry's fastest platforms for MM5,
the widely used numerical weather prediction model from
Pennsylvania State University and the National Center for
Atmospheric Research (NCAR). SGI technology also powers one of the
fastest platforms for the WRF (Weather Research and Forecast)
Modeling System, a numerical forecast system being developed and
managed by the Department of Commerce (NOAA), the Department of
Defense (Air Force and Navy), the Department of Transportation
(FAA), and the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
(UCAR/NCAR). "SGI HPC systems for meteorology and weather
forecasting are literally all around the world, assisting
scientists to analyze, understand and predict weather and climate
variability and changes," noted Dr. Ilene Carpenter, business
development manager for weather and climate, SGI. SGI technology
powers IMGW (a weather forecasting center) in Poland, the Norwegian
Meteorological Institute, the Swedish Meteorological and
Hydrological Institute, the Brazilian Navy as well as the National
Institute of Meteorology in Brazil, the Canadian Meteorological
Center, the Bureau of Meteorology in Beijing, the Bureau of
Meteorology in Shanghai, and the Center for Mathematical Modeling
and Computer Simulation in India. "Since the introduction of Altix
64-bit Linux OS-based systems, SGI has seen a burst of sales
activity to universities for meteorology studies," continued Dr.
Carpenter, "including the University of Colorado, Georgia Tech,
University of Florida, and University of Hawaii. The two most
recent installations of SGI Altix systems, at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison in October and Dalhousie University in Halifax,
Nova Scotia in July of 2004, for leading edge climate research and
pollution studies, drives home exactly how unique SGI is in our
commitment to deliver the compute, visualization and storage
capabilities to advance atmospheric and related sciences." SGI
Powers Earthquake Research and Disaster Prevention SGI will also
feature a 2002 dataset from Los Alamos National Labs visualizing
the result if a large meteor were to strike the ocean in a tsunami
animation, using the SAGE hydrocode, jointly developed by Los
Alamos and SAIC. SGI technology also enables leading research
institutions worldwide involved in earthquake research and disaster
prevention, including: The Jet Propulsion Lab at University of
California leads the QuakeSim project, which runs simulations of
earthquakes, including those that cause tsunamis. JPL uses variety
of platforms for simulation but the biggest by far is an SGI
512-processor Altix system. The University of Queensland, Brisbane,
Australia, previously invested in SGI(R) Altix(R) 3000
supercomputing technology powered by the latest 208 Intel Itanium 2
processors as part of an initiative to increase Australia's
research abilities in earth sciences and earthquake phenomena. The
first purchase and delivery of an SGI Altix system worldwide and
the first full-scale high-end Linux(R) OS-based parallel processing
system in Japan was sold to the University of Tokyo's Earthquake
Research Institute (ERI). ERI received a 108-processor SGI Altix
system to be used as a shared supercomputing resource for ERI
researchers conducting advanced earthquake and volcano studies,
including research on ways to minimize earthquake and volcano
damage. The Arctic Region Supercomputer Center (ARSC) uses a
three-dimensional immersive environment, a MD Flex(TM) system,
powered by an SGI(R) Onyx(R) system powered by four CPUs, four
gigabytes of memory, and two SGI(R) InfiniteReality4(TM) graphics
pipes. The room housing the system is called the ARSC Discovery
Lab, where three walls and the floor are equipped to display
stereoscopic images, which allows researchers to virtually immerse
themselves in their data set. A 384-CPU SGI(R) Origin(R) server
system was installed in 2002 at Japan's National Research Institute
for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention (NIED). NIED conducts
earth sciences research and development as applied to disaster
tracking and prediction, a field that relies heavily on large-scale
simulations. Since 1991, NIED has been a pioneer in the use of data
simulations to create global ocean circulation models, crust
structure analyses and earthquake wave transfers, along with
related simulations involving massive calculations. SILICON
GRAPHICS | The Source of Innovation and Discovery(TM) SGI, also
known as Silicon Graphics, Inc. (NYSE:SGI), 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, Origin,
Onyx, Reality Center, InfiniteReality, the SGI cube and the SGI
logo are registered trademarks and InfiniteReality4 and The Source
of Innovation and Discovery are trademarks of Silicon Graphics,
Inc., in the United States and/or other countries worldwide. Linux
is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in several countries.
Intel and Itanium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel
Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other
countries. All other trademarks mentioned herein are the property
of their respective owners. MEDIA CONTACTS Marla Robinson SGI
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 PR Hotline, +1-650-933-7777, or PR
Facsimile, +1-650-933-0283, all of SGI Web site:
http://www.sgi.com/
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