Posted: Wed, June 4, 2008
Cardiff University goes live with new High Performance Computing Facility
Cardiff University has today announced the opening of its new High Performance Computing Centre of Excellence to support a range of advanced research projects and extend the scope and quality
of its computer based research. This follows the official launch of Advanced Research Computing @ Cardiff (ARCCA), a new division
set up by the University to co-ordinate, support and develop its advanced research facilities across all academic disciplines. ARCCA was launched on the 2 June by Wales' First Minister, Rhodri Morgan.
The Centre of Excellence will offer a High-end Computing Service based on a computer system supplied by Bull Information Systems and will be
housed in a new state-of-the art data centre. The new computer will be one of the most advanced in the UK academic sector, giving a whole new dimension to Cardiff University research. Initial test runs
suggest it will be among the top three most powerful computers in British universities, enabling new research projects which previously were either impossible or would have taken too long to run.
The supercomputer will be run by ARCCA and has been set up to supply all University academics with the high-powered technology necessary to tackle today's big research questions. Already
ARCCA is applying its computing power to work in a wide variety of fields including health; neuroscience; geosciences; astrophysics; archaeology; and renewable energy.
The High Performance Computer will support study in all the University's areas of research, including the arts, humanities and social sciences. The Business School is already working with ARCCA on
economic modelling, and the School of English, Communication and Philosophy on linguistics.
The computer is the first major system in a UK university to use Intel® Xeon® Quad-core processors, with four cores to each chip. The system has approximately four terabytes (or four
million megabytes) of memory and has just been measured as performing 20 trillion floating point operations a second (20 Teraflops). These results have yet to be officially ratified but would make it the
most powerful cluster in a UK University dedicated to in-house research. It was funded with a Science Research Investment Funding (SRIF) grant from the Higher Education Funding Council Wales.
The computer will not only be one of the most powerful at a British University, but also one of the greenest. Based in its own state-of-the-art data centre, it is housed in ten energy efficient
water-cooled racks, saving around £30,000 a year on conventional air cooling systems.
Launching the High Performance Computer at the University on 2 June, Welsh Assembly Government First Minister, the Rt Hon Rhodri Morgan AM, said: "The developments in High Performance
Computing brought about by ARCCA are already making huge differences in many areas of research. This puts Cardiff University at the forefront of computer-based research techniques in Wales and the
UK, as well as internationally."
Didier Lamouche, Bull Chief Executive Officer commented, "Being involved in this partnership with Cardiff University has enabled us to demonstrate the importance of utilising leading-edge IT
resources to pursue ground-breaking research. This new supercomputer will support Cardiff's growing reputation as one of the most innovative, ambitious and successful universities in the country and
internationally. As we share a forward-thinking approach, the University has taken advantage of the advances Bull has made in delivering computing technology. The promise is even more significant
enhancements in research that will have a profound impact on the understanding of the world and consequently the everyday lives of people. Bull is proud to be part of this association, which reinforces
our commitment to developing leading high performance computing."
The Vice-Chancellor of Cardiff University, Dr David Grant, said: "The technical specifications of the Bull High Performance Computer are extremely impressive. We expect the research enabled by this
computational power will be more impressive still. Computer modelling is becoming vital to our understanding of human biology and the development of new drugs. Simulation will bring major benefits in
the sciences and engineering, and open up completely new research fields in the arts, humanities and social sciences. The new Cardiff High Performance Computing Centre of Excellence will keep the
University at the forefront of these exciting possibilities in all of its academic disciplines."
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