Internationally Recognized Research Institute Begins Large-Scale 3-D Visualization Studies with SGI® Altix® UV 1000.
SGI announced today that the Institute of Fluid Science, Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan has begun operation of an SGI high performance computing (HPC) system. The HPC system consists of an SGI® Altix® UV 1000 operating at over 32 teraflops and delivering up to 4x peak performance over the previous system.
The new solution, added to other HPC systems already in place at the Institute, was designed and implemented by SGI Professional Services. It was configured with over 3550 cores of Intel® Xeon® processor X7560 series. It contains 10 terabytes (TB) of total memory with 4 TB of shared memory, and includes an integrated multi-screen Cave Automatic Virtual Environment (CAVE) 3-D visualization system. Applications such as Fluent, SGI® OpenFOAM® and in-house codes are utilized, enabling users to run AVS or Ensight to visualize the output data.
Institute of Fluid Science, Tohoku University is focused on high quality investigations on a wide range of studies. These include numerical simulation of sonic booms of supersonic aircraft, three-dimensional simulation of core-collapse supernovae, simulations and the design of intracranial stents for treating cerebral aneurysms and the associated blood flow analysis, meteorological forecast by downscaling simulations, measurement-integrated airport-area simulation for wake turbulence measurements, and numerical prediction of erosion of pipes in nuclear power plants due to liquid droplet impingement.
“We’re pleased that Tohoku University’s Institute of Fluid Science has been able to seamlessly integrate an SGI Altix UV 1000 into their existing infrastructure and bring it online at this time,” said Nobuhiko Nakatsu, president of SGI Japan. “The results of their research will benefit communities around the world for years to come.”
“Institute of Fluid Science, Tohoku University requires outstanding high performance computing technology to advance their research agenda,” said Rajeeb Hazra, general manager of HPC at Intel. “By using the Intel® Xeon® processor X7560 series, the SGI® Altix® UV 1000 has the desired performance, memory capacity, and bandwidth to handle complex data intensive problems in fluid science. Intel is excited to help these scientists conduct collaborative research to move forward the state of the art.”
Aug 23, 2011
Popular Articles
- Automotive Tier-One Suppliers Adopt TPM for Faster, Automated Data Translations
- Femap® From Siemens PLM Software Now Sold Worldwide Through NEi Software's Reseller Network
- Sescoi's WorkNC 5-Axis and Auto 5 - a competitive advantage at ALLIO
- Autodesk Acquires T-Splines Modeling Technology Assets
- Visteon Technology Helps Drivers to Be More Aware of Surroundings
- Infotech Enterprises's revenue Rs 2327.5mn for 3rd quarter ended December 31, 2008
- New powerful functionalities for think3’s ThinkDesign 2009.1
- PTC Announces Data Showing That PTC124 Causes Statistically Significant Improvements in Chloride Channel Function in Cystic Fibrosis Patients
- Michael Schley named as 2008 ifma fellow
- Engineering Simulation Software from ANSYS Used to Help Calibrate Meteorological Instruments on Phoenix Mars Lander