June 20, 2011
Rachel Hoover/Jill Dunbar Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif 650-604-4789 rachel hoover@nasa gov / jill dunbar@nasa gov
RELEASE: 11-194
NASA'S PLEIADES SUPERCOMPUTER RANKS AMONG WORLD'S FASTEST
WASHINGTON -- NASA's largest supercomputer is seventh on the TOP500 list of the world's most powerful, high-performance computers The announcement was made at the 26th International Supercomputing Conference in Hamburg, Germany
Pleiades, located at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif , supports more than 1,000 active users around the country who are advancing our knowledge about the Earth, solar system and the universe Pleiades is used to meet the computing needs on NASA's most demanding modeling and simulation projects in aeronautics; Earth and space science; exploration systems and technologies; and future space operations
"We're really excited that Pleiades delivered nearly 83 percent of the theoretical peak performance," said Rupak Biswas, chief of the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division at Ames "This means our science and engineering users get extremely efficient use of their computing time on the system Reaching the sustained petaflop per second rate is a significant milestone for NASA and its industry partners "
Since last June, the NAS Division has implemented a series of expansions to the system's performance capabilities The team recently added 14 new SGI(R) Altix(R) ICE 8400 systems so that Pleiades now contains 23,296 Intel(R) Xeon(R) quad- and hex-core processors (111,104 cores in 182 racks) that can run at a theoretical peak of approximately 1 32 quadrillion floating point operations, or calculations, per second It achieved an official sustained rate of 1 09 petaflop per second using the LINPACK benchmark, the industry standard for measuring a system's floating point computing power
Pleiades runs on three generations of Intel-based processors with varying memory per core across two generations of InfiniBand(R) technology The latest hex-core Intel(R) Xeon(R) 5600 (Westmere) and earlier quad-core 5570 (Nehalem) processors run at a speed of 2 93 GHz, while the original Pleiades 5400 (Harpertown) quad-core processors run at 3 GHz
Since its installation in 2008, scientists have run large-scale jobs on Pleiades to gain insight into Earth's ocean and climate variability; reduce harmful emissions from aircraft; and design future vehicles for planetary and space exploration The system also has been critical to supporting debris damage assessment on space shuttle missions and gave managers data about critical decisions to perform repairs and clear the orbiter for safe landing
The NAS facility continues to feature the world's largest InfiniBand(R) interconnect network with 11,648 nodes and more than 63 miles of cabling -- long enough to reach the "frontier of space" from the surface of Earth The double data rate, quad data rate and hybrid cables interconnect Pleiades' nodes with mass data storage systems and the hyperwall-2 visualization system This allows scientists to concurrently view and analyze their data while their computational jobs run, often leading to the discovery of previously unknown details in their ultra-large datasets
For more information about the Pleiades supercomputer, visit:
http://www nas nasa gov/hecc/resources/pleiades html
For information about the TOP500 list, visit:
http://www top500 org/
For information about NASA and agency programs, visit:
http://www nasa gov
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