Thursday, May 8th 2008

NASA, Intel and SGI Plan to 'Soup Up' Supercomputer

NASA, Intel and SGI today announced the signing of an agreement establishing intentions to collaborate on significantly increasing the space agency's supercomputer performance and capacity. Under the terms of a Space Act Agreement, NASA will work closely with Intel and SGI to increase computational capabilities for modeling and simulation at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) facility at NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.

"Achieving such a monumental increase in performance will help fulfill NASA's increasing need for additional computing capacity and will enable us to provide the computational performance and capacity needed for future missions," said Ames Director S. Pete Worden. "This additional computational performance is necessary to help us achieve breakthrough scientific discoveries."

NASA Ames, Intel and SGI will work together on a project called Pleiades to develop a computational system with a capacity of one Petaflops peak performance (1,000 trillion operations per second) by 2009 and a system with a peak performance of 10 Petaflops (10,000 trillion operations per second) by 2012.

"Throughout its history, NASA has sought to explore the most compelling questions about mankind, Earth, and the worlds that await our discovery," said Robert "Bo" Ewald, chief executive officer of SGI. "SGI is proud to be part of this effort. These groundbreaking new systems powered by SGI and fueled by the latest multi-core Intel processors, offer a platform for new discoveries that will help us all achieve the most promising future for the human race. This effort is important to everyone on this planet."

This collaboration builds on the 2004 deployment of Columbia, which generated a tenfold increase in supercomputing capacity for the agency. Meeting NASA's future mission challenges will require additional computational resources to handle increasingly higher fidelity modeling and simulation. In 2009, NASA expects to increase that computing capability 16 times with the Pleiades project, and by an additional tenfold in 2012.

"Intel, working with SGI, is proud to play an important role in helping NASA expand the pursuit of scientific discovery," said Diane M. Bryant, vice president of Intel's Digital Enterprise Group and general manager of the Server Platforms Group. "Systems such as Pleiades challenge the imagination, and guide our exploration of Earth, space, and beyond. As we approach performance that was once thought impossible to achieve, our eyes are opened even wider to the vast possibilities enabled by supercomputing."
Source: Intel
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9 Comments on NASA, Intel and SGI Plan to 'Soup Up' Supercomputer

#1
farlex85
The ultimate overclockers. Nice.
Posted on Reply
#2
ktr
I thought SGI is gone. I know they sold all their buildings in Mountain View to Google, and moved to Sunnyvale, but I never heard any news from them.
Posted on Reply
#3
imperialreign
what this means . . . is that the Federal government has finally decided to start sending some of our tax dollars over to NASA - instead of putting them into other, pointless pursuits.


Doesn't it make ya feel all warm and fuzzy knowing that your tax dollars are helping to build a rig that could potentially max-out Crysis?!
Posted on Reply
#4
PVTCaboose1337
Graphical Hacker
imperialreignwhat this means . . . is that the Federal government has finally decided to start sending some of our tax dollars over to NASA - instead of putting them into other, pointless pursuits.


Doesn't it make ya feel all warm and fuzzy knowing that your tax dollars are helping to build a rig that could potentially max-out Crysis?!
I wanna be able to max out Crysis. Hopefully they will too! :D
Posted on Reply
#5
Solaris17
Super Dainty Moderator
PVTCaboose1337AMD Athlon 64 3800+ @ 2815.95 MHz (Thanks Solaris17, ♥U)
lol thank you
Posted on Reply
#6
Morgoth
Fueled by Sapphire
finaly some money to spacetech research :)
Posted on Reply
#7
Weer
imperialreignDoesn't it make ya feel all warm and fuzzy knowing that your tax dollars are helping to build a rig that could potentially max-out Crysis?!
The heck you say..? Err, I mean.. Blasphemy!
Posted on Reply
#8
Haytch
Crysis is a complete joke. A 7 year old one.

Would be nice to see what these 3 major players can produce with the resources they have at their disposal. Hopefully a breakthru in technology. Hopefully a holodeck!
Posted on Reply
#9
imperialreign
HaytchCrysis is a complete joke. A 7 year old one.

Would be nice to see what these 3 major players can produce with the resources they have at their disposal. Hopefully a breakthru in technology. Hopefully a holodeck!
with these 3 . . . wouldn't ever happen. Intel would be adamant about running it on a C2D architecture with uber MHz, and Nasa would never have the money to fund the project cause the fed govnmt would keep diverting funds.
Posted on Reply
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