Distributed Terascale Facility to Commence with $53 Million NSF Award
released
August 9, 2001
Contacts
Tom Garritano
tgarrita@nsf.gov
703.292.8070
Bob Borchers
rborcher@nsf.gov
703.292.8970
High-performance computing system will come on-line in mid-2002
WASHINGTON, DC The world's first multi-site supercomputing systemDistributed Terascale
Facility (DTF)will be built and operated with $53-million from the
National Science Foundation (NSF). The DTF will perform 11.6-trillion
calculations per second and store more than 450-trillion bytes of data,
with a comprehensive infrastructure called the "TeraGrid" to link
computers, visualization systems and data at four sites through a
40-billion bits-per-second optical network.
The National Science Board (NSB) today approved a three-year NSF award,
pending negotiations between NSF and a consortium led by the National
Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) in Illinois and the San Diego
Supercomputer Center (SDSC) in California, the two leading-edge sites of
NSF's Partnerships for Advanced Computational Infrastructure (PACI). NCSA
and SDSC will be joined in the DTF project by Argonne National Laboratory
(ANL) in suburban Chicago and the California Institute of Technology
(Caltech) in Pasadena.
"The DTF will be a tremendous national resource," said NSF director Rita
Colwell. "With this innovative facility, NSF will demonstrate a whole new
range of capabilities for computer science and fundamental scientific and
engineering research, setting high standards for 21st Century deployment of
information technology."
"Terascale" refers to computers that perform more than one trillion
floating-point operations per second, called "teraflops." The DTF would
begin operation in mid-2002, reaching peak performance of 11.6 teraflops by
April 2003. The facility will support research such as storm, climate and
earthquake predictions; more-efficient combustion engines; chemical and
molecular factors in biology; and physical, chemical and electrical
properties of materials.
"This facility will stretch the boundaries of high-performance computing
and give U.S. computer scientists and other researchers in all science and
engineering disciplines access to a critical new resource," said NSB chair
Eamon Kelly.
Adds Ruzena Bajcsy, NSF assistant director for Computer and Information
Science and Engineering, "The DTF can lead the way toward a ubiquitous
'Cyber-Infrastructure' in which the national Grid of research networks will
permit calculations, storage and throughput at tera levels. This facility
will serve the high-end computational science community, help train the
next generation of information-technology professionals and propagate the
latest technology for maximum public benefit."
The partnership will work primarily with IBM, Intel Corporation and Qwest
Communications to build the facility, along with Myricom, Oracle
Corporation and Sun Microsystems. "The DTF will be the most comprehensive
information infrastructure ever deployed for open scientific research, and
we feel privileged to have a leadership role in this historic effort," said
NCSA director Dan Reed and SDSC director Fran Berman in a joint statement.
"The TeraGrid will integrate the most-powerful computers, software,
networks, data-access systems and applications, creating a unique national
resource that will catalyze new breakthroughs and yield unforeseen benefits
for all of society." Berman and Reed are DTF co-principal investigators.
Each of the four DTF sites will play a unique role in the project:
- NCSA will lead the project's computational aspects with an IBM Linux
cluster powered by Intel's second-generation 64-bit Itanium family
processor, code-named "McKinley." Peak performance will be 6.1 teraflops
with the cluster, which will work in tandem with existing hardware to reach
8 teraflops with 240 terabytes of secondary storage.
- SDSC will lead the project's data- and knowledge-management effort with a
4-teraflops IBM Linux cluster based on Intel's McKinley processor, with 225
terabytes of storage and a next-generation Sun high-end server for managing
access to Grid-distributed data.
- Argonne will have a 1-teraflop IBM Linux cluster to host advanced
software for high-resolution rendering, remote visualization and advanced
Grid software.
- Caltech will focus on scientific data, with a .4-teraflop McKinley
cluster and a 32-node IA-32 cluster that will manage 86 terabytes of
on-line storage.
The DTF project director will be Rick Stevens, who is a computer science
faculty member at the University of Chicago and director of the mathematics
and computer science division of ANL, a U.S. Department of Energy
laboratory. "I'm excited by this opportunity to help build on prior NSF and
PACI successes," said Stevens, "and it is a wonderful example of
interagency cooperation."
The DTF will join a previous terascale facility commissioned by NSF in
2000. That system, located at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, came
on-line ahead of schedule in early 2001 and is expected to reach peak
performance of 6 teraflops in October.
NSF is an independent federal agency that supports fundamental research and
education across all fields of science and engineering, with an annual
budget of about $4.5 billion. NSF funds reach all 50 states, through grants
to about 1,800 universities and institutions nationwide. Each year, NSF
receives about 30,000 competitive requests for funding, and makes about
10,000 new funding awards.
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