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Contents December 2009
University of Minnesota Supercomputing Institute offers enhanced high performance computing resources to researchers with new supercomputer powered by HP
Minneapolis 17 November 2009 The University of Minnesota Supercomputing Institute for Advanced Computational Research (MSI) has added HP ProLiant blade servers for a new high performance computing (HPC) system to support research across a broad range of disciplines. This powerful new system placed no. 67 on the November 17 TOP500 list of the world's most powerful supercomputers, which HP ProLiant blade servers continue to lead with 42 percent of entries.
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MSI is celebrating its 25th anniversary as an interdisciplinary research programme spanning all the University of Minnesota colleges.

The new system will increase MSI's high-performance computing capacity, improving its ability to support researchers at the University of Minnesota and across the state. Powered by 1,083 HP ProLiant BL280 G6 servers with 8,664 computing cores, the new supercomputer, named "Itasca" by MSI, delivers 97 teraFLOPS of theoretical computing performance - three times the aggregate theoretical peak performance of MSI's other core computing resources.

Among the reasons MSI chose the HP ProLiant BL280c are its scalable quad-core computing performance and memory capabilities. With outstanding dual-processor performance and price per watt, the HP ProLiant BL280c reduces overall data centre power consumption while maintaining high performance. The processing density of the HP ProLiant BL280c is ideal for analyzing massive data sets such as those used for mathematical algorithms and scientific modelling. The HP ProLiant BL280c G6 delivers up to a 190.8 megaflops-per-watt ratio, running the TOP500 Linpack Benchmark across a 1056-node system.

The HP supercomputer at MSI features 24 gigabytes of RAM per node, a 40 Gb QDR InfiniBand interconnect, and more than 150 terabytes of attached storage. With a dramatic increase in its number of cores, MSI anticipates substantially improved capacity for running applications to resolve research problems.

More than 4,000 active users across a wide range of disciplines utilize MSI's diverse computational resources, making MSI a focal point of collaborative research at the University of Minnesota. MSI currently supports almost 500 active research groups by providing complete high-performance computing environments including systems, software, storage, support, and services. MSI resources have helped these researchers to be awarded $103.9 million in external funding in the past year. With the new HP supercomputer, MSI will be well poised to expand its established role of serving engineering and the physical and life sciences, and to provide services to many disciplines not traditionally served by MSI.

"Today, high-demand computation is absolutely central to a wide array of important research areas that are vital to putting the University of Minnesota in a leadership position", stated Tom Jones, interim director of MSI. "This new computing system is a big step above what most other universities can call on, so our faculty and students are really excited by the big boost in computational resources they will have to drive the frontiers of knowledge."

"To maximize the effectiveness of their new supercomputer, MSI needed high system performance combined with ease of deployment and energy efficiency", stated Steve Cumings, director of marketing, Scalable Computing and Infrastructure, HP. "MSI's choice of HP ProLiant BL280c blade servers for their new system shows its value in a complex HPC environment, enabling MSI to expand their support and speed of active research, ultimately

driving innovation."

HP solidified its position on the TOP500 list of the world's most powerful supercomputers with the HP BladeSystem c-Class and HP ProLiant blade servers dominating competitive installations for the third consecutive year.

HP remains the leader with a total of 208 (42 percent) of the top 500 systems built on HP ProLiant architectures. Of those, HP BladeSystem c-Class servers power 203 entries, 40.6 percent of the total units. Blade servers enable customers to increase computing performance within existing physical data centre space. HP industry-standard blade servers lead the supercomputing market by easing the management of these large and complex systems while managing system energy efficiencies.

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Source: University of Minnesota & HP

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