Next-Generation Supercomputer at Department of Energy's Berkeley Lab Will Help Advance Open Scientific Research
SEATTLE, WA -- (Marketwire) -- 08/03/09 -- Cray Inc. (NASDAQ: CRAY) today announced that
the company has won the contract to install a next-generation supercomputer
at the Department of Energy's (DOE) National Energy Research Scientific
Computing Center (NERSC) located at the Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory. The multi-year supercomputing contract includes delivery of a
Cray XT5(TM) massively parallel processor supercomputer, which will be
upgraded to a future-generation Cray supercomputer. When completed, the new
Cray will deliver a peak performance of more than one petaflops
(quadrillion mathematical calculations per second).
Like NERSC's current 355-teraflops Cray XT4(TM) system, nicknamed
"Franklin," the new supercomputing system will help advance open science
research in climate modeling, biology, environmental sciences, combustion,
materials science, chemistry, geosciences, fusion energy, astrophysics,
nuclear and high-energy physics, and other disciplines, along with
scientific visualization of massive data sets. Click here for
more information about the scientific work done on Franklin.
"As NERSC is the primary supercomputing center for DOE's Office of Science,
making Cray's latest technology available to our users will accelerate
innovation across a wide range of scientific disciplines, helping
scientists tackle problems of vital importance to our nation's future,"
said Michael Strayer, Associate Director of DOE's Office of Advanced
Scientific Computing Research.
According to NERSC Director Kathy Yelick, Cray was awarded the contract
based on several factors, including performance and energy efficiency on a
set of application benchmarks that capture the challenging workload of the
3,000 NERSC users.
"Because we serve such a large and scientifically diverse user community,
it's critical that our systems deliver the best performance while running
real-world applications -- especially as users scale their codes to run on
tens of thousands of processor cores," Yelick said.
The new Cray system will provide many pioneering features, including the
ability for users to customize the operating system for their own codes and
to schedule jobs and access their data without logging in to the
supercomputer. Yelick adds, "Cray's new cooling system and interconnect
network technology mesh well with our research efforts into energy
efficient computing and programming models."
"We are proud that NERSC chose Cray as its ongoing partner to provide its
diverse and demanding users with advanced scientific computing
capabilities," said Peter Ungaro, president and CEO of Cray.