Dalhousie University Chooses SGI Supercomputing and Storage
Solutions for Global Atmospheric Pollution Research and Quantum
Nano-Electronics Studies Global Numerical Model, Now Tracking
Pollutant Emissions in Up to 35 Atmosphere Levels Around the World,
Runs 3-to-4 Times Faster On SGI Altix 350 SAN DIEGO, Booth 90, Jan.
10 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Silicon Graphics (NYSE:SGI) today at
the 85th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting announced
that SGI(R) Altix(R) systems and SGI(R) InfiniteStorage solutions
are assisting two cutting-edge assistant professors in two very
diverse fields of research in the Physics and Atmospheric Science
Department at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Both
researchers are immersed in solving intense computational problems
requiring the speed and expandability of SGI(R) high performance
compute (HPC) power and storage, and both agree SGI Altix computers
turned out to be the best choice for the large data sets they run.
Dr. Randall Martin is currently conducting global pollution studies
-- including how pollutants react in the atmosphere and how
pollution spreads across the globe -- as well as developing tools
to monitor emissions for international agreements, such as the
Kyoto Protocol, on two SGI Altix systems with heavy duty SGI
storage support. Dr. Jordan Kyriakidis is researching theoretical
quantum nano-electronics, with a long-term goal to develop quantum
materials as replacements for transistors in computers and other
electronics, using another pair of SGI Altix systems linked to SGI
RAID storage via fiber optics. Global Pollution Studies No stranger
to the power of SGI high performance computers, Dr. Martin, a
Research Associate at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics in addition to his role at Dalhousie, previously
assisted in the design of a global numerical model at Harvard,
GEOS-CHEM, which is now used at a number of universities. A UNIX(R)
OS-based application originally developed on an SGI(R) Origin(R)
family system running SGI(R) IRIX(R) OS, GEOS-CHEM uses simulated
meteorological fields from NASA and other models to divide the
atmosphere into a grid and solve for chemical composition. The
application was already in the process of being ported to a variety
of other platforms including 32-bit Linux(R) operating system when
Dr. Martin considered the Linux OS-based SGI Altix for his work at
Dalhousie. SGI technicians easily ported GEOS-CHEM to the 64-bit
Altix system. Dr. Martin reported the SGI Altix system runs his
global atmospheric data sets at 3 to 4 times the speed of computers
he used at Harvard University a little over two years ago. To track
global emissions, Dr. Martin receives satellite data from NASA and
the European Space Agency (ESA), as well as data from aircraft and
other sources. During the summer of 2004, Dr. Martin completed his
first satellite retrieval using the two SGI(R) Altix(R) 350
systems, each with 16 Intel(R) Itanium(R) 2 processors, linked via
gigabit Ethernet to an SGI(R) InfiniteStorage TP9100 with 3TB of
RAID storage. Taking raw spectra data of the earth's atmosphere and
of the sun, he assessed pollutant concentrations around the globe
and is now providing that data to NASA for analysis as part of an
integrated satellite aircraft campaign. The campaign, called
ICARTT, is designed to investigate the outflow of pollution from
North America into the global atmosphere. The aircraft take samples
of a whole range of atmospheric constituents, including aerosols
and trace gasses -- some of which are toxic, some greenhouse
gasses. "SGI Altix is much, much faster than anything I've ever
used before," said Dr. Martin, "probably three to four times
faster, which is just phenomenal. Altix also enables us to run our
simulations at higher resolutions and therefore provide a more
accurate picture of the atmosphere, and it enables to us examine
results more quickly: in my work, time is of the essence. It's
important to have a fast computer; otherwise we'd have to restrict
what we could do, the type of sensitivity studies we could perform,
the resolution at which features can be examined, and the number of
pollutants that we can put into our model." Resolution currently
runs at two degrees by two and a half degrees (approximately
several hundred kilometers) on Dr. Martin's SGI Altix system
running GEOS-CHEM software. GEOS-CHEM divides the atmosphere up
into about a million boxes -- and within those boxes there are
roughly 30 to 35 layers in the atmosphere -- and solves for all of
those attributes, simultaneously, every three hours. "Thanks to the
SGI Altix systems, we're contemplating the possibility of running
at one by one degree globally, which is something we never would
have even considered beforehand, but I believe we can do it with
the SGI system," added Dr. Martin. "Understand: one by one
increases the number of 'boxes' by a factor of five and in each of
those boxes we have maybe 45 different pollutants that we advected
(transported from one box to the other, either vertically or
horizontally) around between boxes, so all of these numbers all
multiply and you can get a very large array of data very quickly."
Not only can SGI Altix handle the one by one degree calculations,
said Dr, Martin, but, "Most importantly, SGI InfiniteStorage TP9100
with 3 TB of RAID can expand to support one by one resolution." By
using satellites to observe the abundance of pollutants in the
atmosphere, and combining the satellite data and the models, Dr.
Martin said he could infer what the emissions from various
countries had to have been. He is expecting to develop techniques
towards enforcing protocols, such as the Kyoto Protocol, to monitor
emissions from various countries from space using the SGI Altix 350
system running the GEOS-CHEM model. Dr. Martin will also be
investigating the use of the GEM-AQ model, currently being
developed in Canada, to similarly examine surface air quality and
climate issues. "SGI Altix offered the best price/performance of
any vendor," concluded Dr. Martin. "We looked at IBM, Sun, and HP,
but SGI had a much better price/performance, and by
price/performance I mean relating to the number of computations it
can do within a shared memory framework and the RAM that could be
provided as well. Plus I'd had a lot of good experience with SGI
beforehand, on their Origin platform. SGI has a strong history of
shared memory systems and that was important as well." More
information on Dr. Randall Martin's work can be found on the Web at
http://fizz.phys.dal.ca/~atmos/. Exploring Quantum Nano-Electronics
Theory on SGI Altix Dr. Jordan Kyriakidis' work is taking him into
uncharted territory; as he points out, he is "a theorist, not an
experimentalist." His work revolves around a simple fact: the world
has relied on transistors (which replaced vacuum tubes) for more
than 40 years, and while electronic devices grow ever smaller,
there has been no essential change in the original transistor. Many
scientists, especially in nanotechnology, feel a replacement -- a
new technology -- will soon be needed. Dr. Kyriakidis uses his two
16-processor SGI Altix 350 systems, with 54GB RAM and SGI Infinite
Storage TP9100, with one TB of storage, to work with quantum dots
-- "think of them as artificial atoms" -- which can be designed and
engineered to have properties a scientist wants them to have, i.e.
artificial hydrogen, artificial helium, etc. "Nanotechnology is a
gigantic field and, within that, the small piece that we're looking
at is called quantum nano-electronics," explained Dr. Kyriakidis.
"This field is relatively new but it's moving very rapidly. The
bottleneck in all of nanotechnology is that we don't have any good
way to control the systems. We know we can do things -- place atoms
one at a time -- but we can't do it very well or very quickly. And
part of the issue that needs to be resolved before the field can
progress is, we have to find new and innovative techniques that
will enable us to control these systems far beyond the current
levels. What I do is look at what kinds of controls we can have on
these systems, and how fine a level of control can we have. We have
a theory of how these artificial atoms should behave and we use the
SGI Altix systems to do quantum simulations -- calculations to
figure out if they do actually have the properties that we think
they should have." This is the first time Dr. Kyriakidis has done
serious research on SGI computers, and a high performance Linux
OS-based system was exactly what he was looking for. "I've had lots
of experience with Linux," he added. "We write a lot of our own
software because there is no generally accepted software:
everything is very bleeding edge. The fact that SGI has these
64-bit Altix machines, which are Linux OS with such huge processing
power in a very professional, high performance grade of machine,
was very attractive to us because it meant we could start being
productive right away. We didn't have to spend time writing
software again on some specialized operating system." In addition
to 64-bit performance on SGI Altix, powerful storage is essential
for quantum simulations. "We have a huge database that we need to
store somewhere," explained Dr. Kyriakidis. "In a sense, we can't
handle the data that our software produces all in one shot, so we
have to store it somewhere and then we have to go back and look
through the data and see what it's trying to tell us. The storage
is an integral part. We have a SGI TP9100 -- a big storage array --
and it's connected via fiber optics to one of our two Altix
systems. With fiber optics from the processor, we can really, very
quickly write the data to the hard drive, which is a collection of
about 10 or 15 hard drives, and then read the data back again." Dr.
Kyriakidis chose SGI as a company, and Altix in particular,
because, "It represented the best value in pure processing power,
operating system and storage requirements and price," he concluded.
"Combine all those things together and SGI Altix far and away
became the best option for us. And so far, we've been bang-on in
our decision; we're quite, quite happy with it. Because we now have
SGI Altix, I'm able to do things that just were not possible
before. SGI Altix systems will clearly enable us to move the
science forward -- more forward than we've ever been able to do
before." More information on Dr. Jordan Kyriakidis' work can be
found on the Web at http://soliton.phys.dal.ca/ Collaboration Key
To Best SGI Solution Both Dr. Martin and Dr. Kyriakidis applied for
Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) funding, through a program
called the New Opportunities Grant, for the monies to acquire
super-fast computers and storage to further their research. Both
received their funding grants and -- in an unusual collaboration --
decided to pool their money to get more together than they would
have individually. "Dalhousie is Nova Scotia's leading research
university and our researchers and graduate students have used SGI
high-performance computer and visualization systems for many
years," said Dr. Carl Breckenridge, vice-president of research at
Dalhousie University. "We're very pleased with this collaborative
initiative by these new researchers, which led to this acquisition
of state-of-the-art SGI Altix systems under the CFI grant. We
encourage our researchers to consider the benefits of pooling
funding when approaching companies like SGI. It can give
researchers great strategic advantages. We look forward to the
results of their research." "SGI's cost-effective 64-bit Altix
systems continue to be of huge importance to atmosphere, weather,
and physics researchers around the world as the migration to Linux
continues among many disciplines in the scientific community," said
Martin Pinard, president of SGI Canada. "Dalhousie University
experienced first-hand how easy it is to port code written in SGI
IRIX over to what is simply the highest performance Linux OS-based
computer system in the world: SGI Altix, backed by the most solid
and reliable storage in the world, the SGI InfiniteStorage family."
Installed in early July 2004, the Dalhousie University installation
included four SGI Altix 350 systems with 16 processors in each
system and two SGI InfiniteStorage TP9100 systems -- one with 3 TB
of storage, the other with 1 TB storage -- plus assorted networking
hardware enabling a gigabit Ethernet connection in one department
and fiber optic connectivity in the other. About Dalhousie
University Located in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada since 1818,
Dalhousie is one of Canada's leading universities. It attracts more
than $93 million dollars in research awards and grants yearly. In
2003, The Scientist magazine named Dalhousie the best place in the
world to work, outside the United States, as a scientific
researcher. For more information, please visit http://www.dal.ca/.
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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
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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
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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,
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