Published:
Cray XT3 Supercomputer Enables Addition of Black Holes to Models of the Cosmos
Increased Computational Power Leads to More Accurate Simulations

Global supercomputer leader Cray Inc. (NASDAQ: CRAY) today announced that researchers using the Cray XT3 supercomputer at
Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) have for the first time been able to
integrate black holes into their large-scale cosmological simulations.
Black holes and the high-energy quasars they spawn have been absent from
the simulations until now because astrophysicists did not have the
computational power to include them in the comprehensive models they use to
study the birth of stars and formation of galaxies and other features of
how the cosmos has evolved since the Big Bang.
"The Cray XT3 supercomputer is ideal for these large-scale simulations
because it has incredibly fast built-in communications," says Carnegie
Mellon University astrophysicist Tiziana Di Matteo. "If we didn't have the
bandwidth to communicate large chunks of data among the processors, it
would have been really tough. I don't think we could run this simulation
anywhere else right now."
Previously considered rare, giant black holes with masses of a million to a
billion times the mass of the sun have in recent years been observed at the
heart of many galaxies. A black hole is formed when the matter in an
exploding star collapses inward, creating such strong gravitational force
that nothing, not even light, can escape. Massive black holes are thought
to have formed in the early universe and have grown in mass by swallowing
large amounts of interstellar matter. Simulations by Di Matteo and
colleagues with PSC's Cray XT3 uncovered previously unknown relationships
between the mass of black holes and the galaxies in which they reside and
show that black holes have an important effect on the architecture and
evolution of the cosmos.
For the huge simulation on the Cray XT3 system, Di Matteo started with
software called GADGET-2. To account for black holes, Di Matteo added code
that "seeded" them at the centers of forming galaxies. She then added an
equation to describe how the black holes accrete or absorb gas, which
increases their mass and gravitation. Finally, she included calculations to
account for the heating of gas surrounding the black hole.
Di Matteo and her colleagues first applied this approach to two colliding
galaxies with black holes at their centers, which revealed new behavior
when the black holes were included. The success of the simulation led to a
paper in the prestigious science journal Nature. The next step was to model
a large portion of the universe at the same resolution and with the same
spatial scale as the more limited, idealized computations that they had
conducted previously. Such models can show astronomers where to point the
Hubble Space Telescope and similar instruments so they can observe the
actual formation of galaxies and associated black holes.
One of the most exciting outcomes of the research is a "movie" that shows
frame-by-frame how structures evolved in a large volume of the universe
over 14 billion years. Black holes first appear when a universe is about
300 million years old, before galaxies have even formed. Matter in the
universe then starts clumping together, and eventually black holes form in
the center of most galaxies.
PSC recently doubled the capacity of its Cray XT3 system to over 21
teraflops (trillion floating point operations per second). PSC's system was
the first Cray XT3 supercomputer to be installed and became the leading
performer among tightly coupled supercomputer architectures on the National
Science Foundation's TeraGrid computing infrastructure.
About Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
PSC provides university, government and industrial researchers with access
to several of the most powerful systems for high performance computing,
communications and data-handling available to scientists and engineers
nationwide for unclassified research. The center is a joint effort of
Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh, together with
Westinghouse Electric Company. Established in 1986, PSC is supported by
several federal agencies, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and private
industry, and is a leading partner in the TeraGrid, the National Science
Foundation's open scientific discovery infrastructure combining leadership
class resources at nine partner sites to create an integrated, persistent
computational resource. Go to www.psc.edu for more information.
About the Cray XT3 Supercomputer
The Cray XT3 supercomputer is the third-generation massively parallel
processor (MPP) system. Purpose-built to deliver exceptional sustained
application performance for challenging scientific and engineering
problems, the Cray XT3 system has set new performance records for systems
equipped with standards-based processors. The supercomputer's high-speed 3D
torus interconnect, advanced MPP operating system and high-speed global
input/output make it possible for users to scale applications from 200 to
more than 30,000 processors without performance loss. The system's scalable
processing element uses x86 64-bit AMD Opteron single- or dual-core
processors that employ HyperTransport technology to increase bandwidth and
reduce latency. The Cray XT3 supercomputer was named 2005 Product of the
Year by Scientific Computing & Instrumentation. Go to
www.cray.com/products/CrayXT3 for more information.
About Cray Inc.
As a global leader in supercomputing, Cray provides highly advanced
supercomputers and world-class services and support to government, industry
and academia. Cray technology enables scientists and engineers to achieve
remarkable breakthroughs by accelerating performance, improving efficiency
and extending the capabilities of their most demanding applications. Cray's
Adaptive Supercomputing vision will result in innovative next-generation
products that integrate diverse processing technologies into a unified
architecture, allowing customers to surpass today's limitations and meeting
the market's continued demand for realized performance. Go to www.cray.com
for more information.
Cray is a registered trademark, and Cray XT3 is a trademark, of Cray Inc.
Opteron is a trademark of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. HyperTransport is a
licensed trademark of the HyperTransport Technology Consortium. All other
trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
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