NSF Awards $20 Million to SDSC to Develop Gordon

The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at UC San Diego has been awarded a $20 million grant from NSF to build and operate a powerful supercomputer.

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The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at UC San Diego has been awarded a five-year, $20 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to build and operate a powerful supercomputer dedicated to solving critical science and societal problems now overwhelmed by the avalanche of data generated by the digital devices of our era.
Among other features, this unique and innovative supercomputer will employ a vast amount of flash memory to help speed solutions now hamstrung by slower spinning disk technology. Also, new “supernodes” will exploit virtual shared-memory software to create large shared-memory systems that reduce solution times and yield results for applications that now tax even the most advanced supercomputers.
Called Gordon, SDSC’s latest supercomputer is slated for installation by Appro International, Inc. in mid-2011, and will become a key part of a network of next-generation high-performance computers (HPC) being made available to the research community through an open-access national grid. Details of the new system were announced in advance of SC09, the leading international conference on high-performance computing, networking, storage and analysis, to be held in Portland, Oregon, November 14-20.
Gordon is the follow-on to SDSC’s previously announced Dash system, the first supercomputer to use flash devices. Dash is a finalist in the Data Challenge at SC09.
“We are clearly excited about the potential for Gordon,” said SDSC Interim Director Michael Norman, who is also the project’s principal investigator. “This HPC system will allow researchers to tackle a growing list of critical ‘data-intensive’ problems. These include the analysis of individual genomes to tailor drugs to specific patients, the development of more accurate models to predict the impact of earthquakes on buildings and other structures, and simulations that offer greater insights into what’s happening to the planet’s climate.”
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