The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Oak Ridge National Laboratory launched a new era of scientific supercomputing today with Titan, a system capable of churning through more than 20,000 trillion calculations each second—or 20 petaflops—by employing a family of processors called graphic processing units first created for computer gaming. Titan will be 10 times more powerful than ORNL's last world-leading system, Jaguar, while overcoming power and space limitations inherent in the previous generation of high-performance computers.
Titan, which is supported by the
Department of Energy, will provide unprecedented computing power for
research in energy, climate change, efficient engines, materials and
other disciplines and pave the way for a wide range of achievements
in science and technology.
The Cray XK7 system contains 18,688
nodes, with each holding a 16-core AMD Opteron 6274 processor and an
NVIDIA Tesla K20 graphics processing unit (GPU) accelerator. Titan
also has more than 700 terabytes of memory. The combination of
central processing units, the traditional foundation of
high-performance computers, and more recent GPUs will allow Titan to
occupy the same space as its Jaguar predecessor while using only
marginally more electricity.
"One challenge in supercomputers
today is power consumption," said Jeff Nichols, associate
laboratory director for computing and computational sciences.
"Combining GPUs and CPUs in a single system requires less power
than CPUs alone and is a responsible move toward lowering our carbon
footprint. Titan will provide unprecedented computing power for
research in energy, climate change, materials and other disciplines
to enable scientific leadership."
Because they handle hundreds of
calculations simultaneously, GPUs can go through many more than CPUs
in a given time. By relying on its 299,008 CPU cores to guide
simulations and allowing its new NVIDIA GPUs to do the heavy lifting,
Titan will enable researchers to run scientific calculations with
greater speed and accuracy.
"Titan will allow scientists to
simulate physical systems more realistically and in far greater
detail," said James Hack, director of ORNL's National Center for
Computational Sciences. "The improvements in simulation fidelity
will accelerate progress in a wide range of research areas such as
alternative energy and energy efficiency, the identification and
development of novel and useful materials and the opportunity for
more advanced climate projections."
Titan will be open to select projects
while ORNL and Cray work through the process for final system
acceptance. The lion's share of access to Titan in the coming year
will come from the Department of Energy's Innovative and Novel
Computational Impact on Theory and Experiment program, better known
as INCITE.
Researchers have been preparing for
Titan and its hybrid architecture for the past two years, with many
ready to make the most of the system on day one. Among the flagship
scientific applications on Titan:
Materials Science The magnetic
properties of materials hold the key to major advances in technology.
The application WL-LSMS provides a nanoscale analysis of important
materials such as steels, iron-nickel alloys and advanced permanent
magnets that will help drive future electric motors and generators.
Titan will allow researchers to improve the calculations of a
material's magnetic states as they vary by temperature.
"The order-of-magnitude increase
in computational power available with Titan will allow us to
investigate even more realistic models with better accuracy,"
noted ORNL researcher and WL-LSMS developer Markus Eisenbach.
Combustion The S3D application models
the underlying turbulent combustion of fuels in an internal
combustion engine. This line of research is critical to the American
energy economy, given that three-quarters of the fossil fuel used in
the United States goes to powering cars and trucks, which produce
one-quarter of the country's greenhouse gases.
Titan will allow researchers to model
large-molecule hydrocarbon fuels such as the gasoline surrogate
isooctane; commercially important oxygenated alcohols such as ethanol
and butanol; and biofuel surrogates that blend methyl butanoate,
methyl decanoate and n-heptane.
"In particular, these simulations
will enable us to understand the complexities associated with strong
coupling between fuel chemistry and turbulence at low preignition
temperatures," noted team member Jacqueline Chen of Sandia
National Laboratories. "These complexities pose challenges, but
also opportunities, as the strong sensitivities to both the fuel
chemistry and to the fluid flows provide multiple control options
which may lead to the design of a high-efficiency, low-emission,
optimally combined engine-fuel system."
Nuclear Energy Nuclear researchers use
the Denovo application to, among other things, model the behavior of
neutrons in a nuclear power reactor. America's aging nuclear power
plants provide about a fifth of the country's electricity, and Denovo
will help them extend their operating lives while ensuring safety.
Titan will allow Denovo to simulate a fuel rod through one round of
use in a reactor core in 13 hours; this job took 60 hours on the
Jaguar system.
Climate Change The Community Atmosphere
Model-Spectral Element simulates long-term global climate. Improved
atmospheric modeling under Titan will help researchers better
understand future air quality as well as the effect of particles
suspended in the air.
Using a grid of 14-kilometer cells, the
new system will be able to simulate from one to five years per day of
computing time, up from the three months or so that Jaguar was able
to churn through in a day.
"As scientists are asked to answer
not only whether the climate is changing but where and how, the
workload for global climate models must grow dramatically,"
noted CAM-SE team member Kate Evans of ORNL. "Titan will help us
address the complexity that will be required in such models."
ORNL is managed by UT-Battelle for the
Department of Energy. The Department of Energy is the single largest
supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United
States, and is working to address some of the most pressing
challenges of our time. For more information, please
visit http://science.energy.gov/.
For more information, including Titan
images and videos, please visit http://www.olcf.ornl.gov/titan/.
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