NASA Ames selects SGI®UV

NASA’s Ames Research Center has selected an SGI® UV™ 2000 shared memory system to support more than a thousand active users around the country who are doing research for earth, space and aeronautics missions.

  • 10 years ago Posted in

Installed early this year at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) facility at Ames, Moffett Field, Calif., Endeavour is a shared-memory system that took the place of the Columbia supercomputer. Named in honour of the Space Shuttle Endeavour, the last orbiter built during NASA’s Space Shuttle Program, this new system is based on the latest Intel® Xeon® processor E5-4600 product family. This processing power, combined in a large, shared-memory cluster, allows Endeavour to provide more high-end computing resources for users while occupying just 10 percent of the previous Columbia system’s floor space. Endeavour will provide large, shared memory capability and will enable solutions for many NASA science and engineering applications, including simulation and modelling of global ocean circulation, galaxy and planet formation, and aerodynamic design for air and space vehicles.


"A portion of our current code base requires either large memory within a node or utilises Open MP as the communication software between tens to hundreds of processors,” said William Thigpen, high-end computing project manager at the NASA facility. “The largest portion of Endeavour is able to meet the large shared memory requirement with 4 terabytes of addressable memory and can apply over 1,000 cores against an Open MP application."


The new Endeavour system includes a total of 1536 cores and 6TB of global shared memory. NASA Ames has an existing community of users who could not easily transition to MPI programming models, and the previous system needed to be replaced by a new platform to support this community. Today, user productivity has improved, and the machines are busy.


"NASA scientists are leading the way in studying climate and earth sciences," said Jorge Titinger, president and CEO of SGI. "This is important work that affects current and future generations. SGI is proud to partner with NASA to provide the necessary infrastructure to enable its research."


“The Endeavour System has a compelling scientific mission that requires advanced capabilities in memory size, processing capability and efficiency,” said Raj Hazra, vice president and general manager of Intel Technical Computing Group. “Intel provides the essential computing technology to help SGI’s innovative system launch these critical scientific missions into orbit through the Intel Xeon E5-4600 family of products.”
 

Quest Software has signed a definitive agreement with Clearlake Capital Group, L.P. (together with...
Infinidat has achieved significant milestones in an aggressive expansion of its channel...
Nearly all senior business decision-makers (96%) surveyed report data strategies as essential to...
SharePlex 10.1.2 enables customers to move data in near real-time to MySQL and PostgreSQL.
NetApp extends its collaboration to accelerate Ducati Corse’s digital transformation and deliver...
Partnership to be featured at COP26, highlighting how data-driven solutions and predictive...
Next-Gen solutions to deliver market-leading enterprise cloud scalability, cyber resilience and...
he EMEA external storage systems market value was up 3.3% year on year in dollars but down 5.5% in...