Alliance To Demonstrate New Technologies at SC2000
released
October 26, 2000
Contact
Karen Green
Public Information Officer
kareng@ncsa.uiuc.edu
217.265.0748 phone
217.244.7396 fax
DALLAS The National Computational Science Alliance
(Alliance) research exhibit at SC2000 will include a cluster of Intel®
Itanium™-based systems and a scalable tiled wall.
For the first time in its four-year history, the Alliance's research
exhibit will include a 16-processor cluster of four four-processor Intel®
Itanium-based machines. The Alliance cluster development team has been
working with the experimental Itanium-based server cluster for several
months, and several scientific codes have already achieved dramatically
improved performance levels. Another new feature of this year's exhibit
will be a scalable tiled wall powered by 1 GHz Pentium® III
processor-based workstations. The tiled wall uses six projectors to show
images with a resolution of 3,000 x 1,500 pixels. It will be used to
display images computed on the Itanium-based server cluster and on a
16-processor 32-bit cluster, and as an Access Grid node.
SC2000, the annual high-performance computing and networking conference,
will be held in Dallas, Nov. 4-10. The SC2000 exhibit hall opens with a
VIP reception from 7-9 p.m. Monday, Nov. 6. Exhibit hall hours are 10
a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 7, and Wednesday, Nov. 8, and 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 9. The Alliance booth is R804.
"We intend to use this year's supercomputing conference to demonstrate
commodity computing architecturessuch as large Itanium-based server
clustersfor our user community," said Dan Reed, director of the Alliance
and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), the
leading-edge site for the Alliance. "In addition, we will show how the
Alliance is continuing to build grid infrastructure and give scientists new
and innovative ways to conduct their research."
Five demos are planned that will use the Itanium-based server cluster for
computation. Astrophysicist Ed Seidel and his team from the Max Planck
Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute) will use
Cactus, a toolkit used for computer simulations in a variety of scientific
disciplines, to simulate a collision of two black holes, with live
streaming visualization and interactive control of the simulation as it
runs. According to Seidel, Cactus has already achieved record performance
levels on the Itanium-based server cluster. The Cactus demo will be Webcast
and will be accessible through the
SC2000 Webcasts page
the week of the conference.
Another application with outstanding performance on the Itanium
architecture is simplified Piecewise Parabolic Method (sPPM). Paul
Woodward, an Alliance researcher at the University of Minnesota, will use
sPPM to simulate 2D supersonic flow with complex shock interactions. In
two additional Itanium cluster demonstrations, NCSA's Dave Semeraro will
use the Visualization Toolkit (VTK) to visualize time varying
electromagnetic fields around several targets and to visualize the
flowfield around an F-18 fighter plane. These applications were developed
by Department of Defense (DoD) researchers at Wright-Paterson Air Force
Base. NCSA's visualization group helped visualize the results using a
version of VTK that supports MPI for communication among multiple
processors. Another demo, presented by Mike Wiltberger of Dartmouth
College and NCSA's Scott Koranda, will use the Itanium-based server cluster
to model the Earth's magnetosphere.
When the tiled wall is not being used to display scientific visualizations,
it will serve as an Access Grid node, connecting show participants at
various booths in the exhibit hall and at remote sites across the country.
The Access Grid, an ensemble of resources that uses high-speed networks to
link people in virtual spaces, will be used to connect faculty with
Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) and high schools to talk about
strategies for involving more minority groups and women in computational
science and engineering. The MSI faculty will be at SC2000 through grant
money from IEEE and the ACM and will participate in the talk at the
Alliance booth. Others will participate remotely through Access Grid nodes
at Boston University and the San Diego Supercomputer Center. The virtual
rap session is planned for 11 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 7.
Other demos planned for the Alliance booth include:
- NCSA's Open Portal Interface Environment (OPIE™), a new Web windowing
environment that helps scientists integrate data, research tools, and other
information into a customizable Web portal. Visitors to the Alliance booth
will see how OPIE allows the user to interact with scientific applications
and HPC monitoring tools in a secure Web environment. In addition, a
wireless version of OPIE will be shown using a Palm VII.
- Researchers from the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at the University
of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) will lead an international collaborative demo
connecting UIC, a booth at the Telecom2000 conference in Tel Aviv, Israel,
and the Alliance booth in Dallas. The demonstration will include
earthquake, atmospheric science, and image-based volume visualizations.
These visualizations will be used to showcase the latest generation of
CAVERNsoft, a library that supports collaboration among desktop environments.
- The Alliance Cosmology team will show new algorithms and results of
cosmological simulations done on NCSA's Origin2000 capability cluster.
These will include Adaptive Mesh Refinement (AMR) simulations of galaxy
formation, large-scale structure of galaxies, and metal enrichment and
reionization of the intergalactic medium.
- Alliance researcher Jack Dongarra of the University of Tennessee will
demonstrate NetSolve, ATLAS, and PAPI. NetSolve is a set of grid-based
tools that allows a user to remotely access computer hardware and software.
ATLAS and PAPI are tools used to enhance performance and performance
measurement.
- The Alliance Chemical Engineering team will perform multiscale
electrochemical calculations using the Alliance Chemical Engineering
Portal. The demo will show how the new portal can utilize grid
servicessuch as Argonne's and USC's Globus toolkitto solve scientific
problems from the desktop.
- The NSF's Education, Outreach and Training Partnership for Advanced
Computational Infrastructure (EOT-PACI) will participate in several
demonstrations in the Alliance booth. Richard Aló, University of
Houston-Downtown, will give a presentation on outreach programs developed
to improve minority representation in computing. Evans Craig of the
University of New Mexico will use the Access Grid to collaborate with
educators at five Tribal colleges in the southwest. The five schools are
part of the Southwest Regional Virtual Collaborative Grid, a new initiative
to enhance network connectivity and promote grid technologies and their
educational benefits among Tribal colleges and the Native American community.
For times and dates of demonstrations, stop by the Alliance booth (R804)
for a daily schedule.
The National Computational Science Alliance is a partnership to prototype
an advanced computational infrastructure for the 21st century and includes
more than 50 academic, government and industry research partners from
across the United States. The Alliance is one of two partnerships funded by
the National Science Foundation's Partnerships for Advanced Computational
Infrastructure (PACI) program, and receives cost-sharing at partner
institutions. NSF also supports the National Partnership for Advanced
Computational Infrastructure (NPACI), led by the San Diego Supercomputer
Center.
The National Center for Supercomputing Applications is the leading-edge
site for the National Computational Science Alliance. NCSA is a leader in
the development and deployment of cutting-edge high-performance computing,
networking, and information technologies. The National Science Foundation,
the state of Illinois, the University of Illinois, industrial partners, and
other federal agencies fund NCSA.
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