Special Features:
SUN MICROSYSTEMS, TACC ADD SUPERCOMPUTER TO TeraGrid
The Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at the University of Texas and Sun
Microsystems Inc announced that Maverick, a new UltraSPARC-based supercomputer
with 3-D visualization capability would go live on the National Science
Foundation's TeraGrid to provide compute power, storage resources and
visualization to researchers, scientists and engineers across the country.
Built to accelerate large-scale data analysis and remote terascale
visualization for time-critical problems like weather prediction, Maverick's
unique configuration makes it one-of-a-kind in the world.
The product of a year-long collaboration in design and configuration,
Maverick
combines Sun's innovative server, storage, software and networking strengths
with TACC's leading visualization expertise.
"We expect Maverick's powerful capabilities for scientific visualization,
supported by TACC's expert visualization staff, to enable the UT Austin and
national research communities to analyze the vast amounts of data being
computed on terascale computing systems and rapidly solve the most challenging
problems," said Jay Boisseau, director of TACC.
Maverick combines highly sophisticated visualization technology with a
high-bandwidth next generation network to tackle some of the nation's most
pressing concerns, including Emergency Response Management and Flood Modeling
(specifically for the state of Texas); Global Weather Prediction; Earthquake
Engineering; and Homeland Security including biohazard research.
At the Mid-American Geospatial Information Center (MAGIC), at UT's Center
for
Space Research, research associate and primary investigator Gordon Wells and
his team engage in a daily struggle to convert large-scale streams of data
into timely information on approaching storms for state and federal emergency
management agencies, regional and local governments, academic institutions, TV
and radio broadcasters, and the public.
Maverick will be able to predict inundation patterns for specific hurricane
and storm tracks, enabling rapid planning and changes in evacuation routes and
shelter locations. "What is best about this project," Wells said, "is that it
holds the promise of moving quickly from an academic study into an operational
mode -- in which the loss of life and property caused by storm surge and flash
floods could be greatly diminished."
Added Kelly Gaither, associate director of TACC and leader of TACC's
Scientific Visualization group, "Maverick is a unique research tool for
computational science because it combines a very large number of processors
with high-end visualization capabilities and massive shared memory. This will
enable researchers to use the same system for both high-end simulations and
data analyses, reducing the time for researchers to solve important
problems."
The technical underpinning of the Maverick system reflects Sun's ability to
develop the high-performance infrastructure needed to enable new sets of
complex applications to be developed and shared across the network. Centered
around a Sun Fire E25K server powered by 64 UltraSPARC IV, Chip Multithreading
(CMT) processors running the Solaris Operating System, the system includes 128
processor cores and 512GB of shared memory on 16 systems boards as well as
terabytes of storage accessible through 8 dual gigabit fiber channel storage
cards. Multiple ports of 10 Gb Ethernet adapters will provide the high
performance networking required for these applications.
"Collaborating with leading, innovative organizations like TACC to develop
state-of-the-art solutions that can later be deployed in more general compute
environments is at the heart of what Sun does," said David Yen, executive vice
president of the scalable systems group at Sun Microsystems. "Our server,
software, storage and networking technology and expertise are well suited to
the data intensive problems of large scale computation, data access, Grid
computing and visualization that will define next-generation
applications."
About Sun Microsystems Inc
Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The
Computer" -- has propelled Sun Microsystems Inc to its position as a provider
of industrial-strength hardware, software and services that make the Net work.
Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and on the World Wide Web at
http://sun.com/.
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