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Boasting a 1,008 Intel core cluster, which we're told is the equivalent of 1,000 desktop systems, the supercomputer will simulate vast regions of the Universe. Supplied by Dell and operated by the University's Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, the 1,008 core machine is a distributed memory cluster that uses an open source software stack powered by 2.66GHz Intel Xeon processors, each with 2GB of memory per core.
The machine also has 85TB of fast parallel storage and 10TB of NFS storage. Try and build that in your living room. Capable of doing a measly billion calculations each second, Sciama will investigate the properties of hundreds of millions of galaxies and solve complex cosmological problems. Maybe it will even have a crack at answering the question, what is the meaning of life?
Without a hint of modesty, Portsmouth's Sciama manager Gary Burton said, "Using it will allow us to explore the whole of cosmic history and analyse data that contains fundamental clues about the origins of the Universe."
To achieve this feat of hyperbole and the exploration of the whole of cosmic history, Sciama will crunch observational data coming from satellites, telescopes and other detectors.
The supercomputer was named after Dennis Sciama, a leading figure internationally in the development of astrophysics and cosmology. The name is also an acronym for SEPnet Computing Infrastructure for Astrophysical Modelling and Analysis.
But we think Portsmouth senior research fellow, Dr David Bacon, said it best. "We're absolutely thrilled to have Sciama...to make real breakthroughs...and by calculating the consequences of mind-boggling new theories." Mind boggling, indeed.
Source - http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer...822/mind-boggling-tackles-universal-questions