| August
18, 2005
NSF Awards $150 Million To Operate, Enhance The TeraGrid
SDSC receives $14 million to provide
TeraGrid resources, development and support
By Ashley Wood
The National
Science Foundation has made a five-year, $150 million award
to operate and enhance the Extensible Terascale Facility, also
called TeraGrid. As one of the leading providers of TeraGrid
resources, the San Diego Supercomputer Center, organized research
unit of UCSD, will receive more than $14 million of this award
over a five-year period.
TeraGrid – built
over the past four years – is the world’s largest,
most comprehensive distributed cyberinfrastructure for open
scientific research. Through high-performance network connections,
TeraGrid integrates high-performance computers, data resources
and tools, and high-end experimental facilities, making these
resources accessible to researchers and educators across the
country to accelerate advances in science and engineering.
“TeraGrid unites
the science and engineering community so that larger, more complex
scientific questions can be answered said NSF director, Arden
Bement, Jr. “Solving these larger challenges, will, in
turn motivate the development of the next generation of cyberinfrastructure.
This is a win-win situation consistent with NSF’s mission
to keep science and engineering at the frontier.”
SDSC's TeraGrid cluster
currently consists of 256 IBM cluster nodes, each with dual
1.5 GHz Intel® Itanium® 2 processors, for a peak performance
of 3.1 Teraflops, a total memory of 1 Terabyte, and a total
of 40 Terabytes GPFS disk through the fiber optic SAN network.
The nodes are equipped with four gigabytes (GBs) of physical
memory per node. The cluster is running SuSE Linux and is using
Myricom's Myrinet cluster interconnect network.
The new TeraGrid award
includes $48 million to provide overall architecture, software
integration, operations and coordination of user support. The
University of Chicago will lead this effort.
An additional $100
million will provide for operation, management and user support
of TeraGrid resources at eight resource provider (RP) sites.
RP sites include Argonne National Laboratory/University of Chicago,
Indiana University, National Center for Computing Applications
(NCSA), Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Pittsburgh Supercomputing
Center, Purdue University, Texas Advanced Computing Center and
SDSC.
George Karniadakis,
a professor of applied mathematics at Brown University, has
long been a leader in applying NSF computing resources to a
variety of fluid dynamics problems. Karniadakis now uses computational
resources simultaneously at four different TeraGrid sites, including
SDSC.
“The TeraGrid
is a distributed supercomputer, a system with potentially unlimited
capability for us,” said Karniadakis. “For the first
time, we can simulate cardiovascular processes in the entire
arterial tree.”
Thomas Jordan, director
of the Southern California Earthquake Center at the University
of Southern California, leads an effort to combine computational
models from several disciplines to shed new light on the consequences
of earthquakes. Computed and then visualized with SDSC resources,
this program also known as “TeraShake” was one of
the largest and most detailed earthquake simulation ever conducted.
“TeraGrid is
providing us with the computational resources to deploy an entirely
new technology for seismic hazard analysis,” said Jordan.
For more information
about TeraGrid, please see www.teragrid.org.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark (858)
534-3624
Media contacts:
Greg Lund, SDSC Communications, 858-534-8314 or greg@sdsc.edu
Ashley Wood, SDSC Communications, 858-534-8363 or awood@sdsc.edu
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