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PrimeurWeekly 13 May 2008
>EuroFlash
>First EDGeS User and Industry Forum meeting calls for participation
>EDGeS BOF Session "Integrating Service and Desktop Grids" at OGF23 in Barcelona
>International Supercomputing Conference in Dresden closes advance registration May 19
>EchoGRID Researcher Exchange Programme now open to Software & Services unit projects
>IBM Power 6 Supercomputer to boost research at Max Planck Society
>GBP 900,000 helps Queen's lead the way in next generation computing
>GridTalk upgrades European Grid computing communications
>Voltaire to deliver InfiniBand support to Novell customers
>Voltaire announces availability of customer support for OFED on any InfiniBand fabric
>USFlash
>NCAR installs 76-teraflop supercomputer for critical research on climate change and severe weather
>Berkeley Lab researchers propose new breed of supercomputers for improving global climate predictions
>SGI to supply NASA's next major supercomputer
>AvarSYS expands high performance computing capabilities with key hires
>Platform Computing establishes Financial Services Business Unit
>HP introduces "extreme" storage for on-line and digital media businesses
>Dell unveils virtualization blockbuster - from servers and storage to software and services
>Vietnam's new collaboration portal goes live on IBM Cloud, accelerating universities' adoption of service science
>Platform Computing's strategy pays off with strong growth
>HP Labs opens research opportunities to academia
>Verari Systems completes milestone shipment of newest blade-based hybrid storage and server solution
>US Hydrologic information system initiative
>Univa UD receives Series B financing
>Oracle debuts enhanced preview of Oracle Fusion Middleware 11g
>Siemens Shared Services banks on Oracle Real Application Clusters to serve over 70,000 employees across the nation
>Dell and VMware simplify disaster recovery with integrated virtual data centre solution
Berkeley Lab researchers propose new breed of supercomputers for improving global climate predictions
Berkeley 06 May 2008 Three researchers from the United States Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have proposed an innovative way to improve global climate change predictions by using a supercomputer with low-power embedded microprocessors, an approach that would overcome limitations posed by today's conventional supercomputers.
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In a paper published in the May issue of theInternational Journal of High Performance Computing Applications, Michael Wehner and Lenny Oliker of Berkeley Lab's Computational Research Division, and John Shalf of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) lay out the benefit of a new class of supercomputers for modelling climate conditions and understanding climate change. Using the embedded microprocessor technology used in cell phones, iPods, toaster ovens and most other modern day electronic conveniences, they propose designing a cost-effective machine for running these models and improving climate predictions.

In April, Berkeley Lab signed a collaboration agreement with Tensilica Inc. to explore such new design concepts for energy-efficient high-performance scientific computer systems. The joint effort is focused on novel processor and systems architectures using large numbers of small processor cores, connected together with optimized links, and tuned to the requirements of highly-parallel applications such as climate modelling.

Understanding how human activity is changing global climate is one of the great scientific challenges of our time. Scientists have tackled this issue by developing climate models that use the historical data of factors that shape the earth's climate, such as rainfall, hurricanes, sea surface temperatures and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. One of the greatest challenges in creating these models, however, is to develop accurate cloud simulations.

Although cloud systems have been included in climate models in the past, they lack the details that could improve the accuracy of climate predictions. Michael Wehner, Lenny Oliker and John Shalf set out to establish a practical estimate for building a supercomputer capable of creating climate models at 1-kilometer (km) scale. A cloud system model at the 1-km scale would provide rich details that are not available from existing models.

To develop a 1-km cloud model, scientists would need a supercomputer that is 1000 times more powerful than what is available today, according to the researchers. But building a supercomputer powerful enough to tackle this problem is a huge challenge.

Historically, supercomputer makers build larger and more powerful systems by increasing the number of conventional microprocessors - usually the same kinds of microprocessors used to build personal computers. Although feasible for building computers large enough to solve many scientific problems, using this approach to build a system capable of modelling clouds at a 1-km scale would cost about $1 billion. The system also would require 200 megawatts of electricity to operate, enough energy to power a small city of 100,000 residents.

In their paper, "Towards Ultra-High Resolution models of Climate and Weather", the researchers present a radical alternative that would cost less to build and require less electricity to operate. They conclude that a supercomputer using about 20 million embedded microprocessors would deliver the results and cost $75 million to construct. This "climate computer" would consume less than 4 megawatts of power and achieve a peak performance of 200 petaflops.

"Without such a paradigm shift, power will ultimately limit the scale and performance of future supercomputing systems, and therefore fail to meet the demanding computational needs of important scientific challenges like the climate modelling", John Shalf stated.

The researchers arrive at their findings by extrapolating performance data from the Community Atmospheric Model (CAM). CAM, developed at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, is a series of global atmosphere models commonly used by weather and climate researchers.

The "climate computer" is not merely a concept. Michael Wehner, Lenny Oliker and John Shalf, along with researchers from UC Berkeley, are working with scientists from Colorado State University to build a prototype system in order to run a new global atmospheric model developed at Colorado State.

"What we have demonstrated is that in the exascale computing regime, it makes more sense to target machine design for specific applications", Michael Wehner stated. "It will be impractical from a cost and power perspective to build general-purpose machines like today's supercomputers."

Under the agreement with Tensilica, the team will use Tensilica's Xtensa LX extensible processor cores as the basic building blocks in a massively parallel system design. Each processor will dissipate a few hundred milliwatts of power, yet deliver billions of floating point operations per second and be programmable using standard programming languages and tools. This equates to an order-of-magnitude improvement in floating point operations per watt, compared to conventional desktop and server processor chips. The small size and low power of these processors allows tight integration at the chip, board and rack level and scaling to millions of processors within a power budget of a few megawatts.
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Source: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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