NCSA Building Academia's Largest High-Resolution Display Wall
released
August 1, 2001
Contact
Karen Green
NCSA Public Information Officer
kareng@ncsa.uiuc.edu
217.265.0748 phone
217.244.7396 fax
Editor's note: This release previously stated that the NCSA display wall is the largest in
academia. However, Princeton University currently operates an 18
foot-by-8-foot wall, which uses 24 projectors and has a resolution of 6,204
x 3,072 pixels.
New system is first step toward largest display wall ever
CHAMPAIGN, IL One of the largest high-resolution, scalable
display wall in academia is now in use at the National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign. The wall gives scientists the opportunity to visualize
their research data in more detail than ever before possible.
The 9-foot-high, 12-foot-wide screen can project images more than 20 times
better than the typical computer monitor. The display surfacea screen
divided into 20 sectionscan display images of 4,096 x 3,840 pixels either
as one large, high-resolution image or as several side-by-side images and
information nodes. A 20-node Linux PC cluster powers the display wall,
with each node consisting of a dual processor, 550 MHz HP Kayak machine
equipped with a GeForce2 graphics accelerator card. The processors in the
cluster communicate using Myricom's Myrinet and are connected to 20 NEC
VT540 projectors arranged in a matrix of four across and five high.
Although it is already among the largest display walls in an academic setting, the
wall is only half complete. When completed, the wall will be the largest
high-resolution display wall anywhere, with a resolution of 8,192 pixels
across and 3,840 pixels high on an 18-foot-wide screen. It will be powered
by a 40-node Linux cluster and connected to 40 video projectors. The
completed wall will be operational by early 2002.
"This display wall is a powerful new tool for science," said Dan Reed,
director of NCSA and the National Computational Science Alliance
(Alliance). "It builds on the power of Linux clusters and open source
software, taking the art and science of scientific visualization to a new
level. The screen is large enough to accommodate a small research team
working together and the resolution is so high that it becomes possible to
visualize large-scale datasets and imagery in their entirety."
The display wall will be a welcome research tool for a wide range of
scientists, including radio astronomers who study data collected by radio
telescopes and compute images of such high resolution that they have yet to
view them in their full detail. Researchers who study the formation of
severe storms plan to use the wall for high-resolution simulations derived
from satellite images. Medical imaging and geophysical applications could
also benefit from the wall's ability to resolve detail never before
possible in computer simulations.
The new display wall combines cutting-edge technologies and new design
ideas developed at NCSA. The wall's ability to tile images into one
seamless image is a process that requires the projectors to be precisely
aligned. NCSA's Rob Stein and Albert Khakshour designed a new frame system
and projector positioner that allows for precise control over alignment.
The frame and positioners are built from commercially available stock, and
each projector is attached to its own positioner and mounted to an upright
frame.
"Assembling the full complement of 20 positioners was a group effort," said
Polly Baker, director of NCSA's Data Mining and Visualization division and
leader of the effort to build the wall. "It took our team about six hours
to build the positioners, attach the projectors, and mount the units to the
frame. And through the Display Wall-in-a-Box initiative, we're providing
the information so that other sites can build and use their own display
walls."
Display Wall-in-a-Box is an Alliance effort to make it simpler and less
expensive to offer high-end display capabilities on top of Linux clusters.
The Alliance's scalable display wall software package, available on CD and
through the Web, includes wall construction information, a software toolkit
of utilities and applications, descriptions of existing Alliance walls, and
guidelines and checklists of features to consider when evaluating new
models of projectors and graphics cards.
For more information on the new NCSA scalable display wall and on Display
Wall-in-a-Box, see http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/TechFocus/Deployment/DBox/.
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.
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.
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