Published: August 10, 2011
Norwegian University of Science and Technology Selects SGI to Take Weather Forecasting and National Research Capabilities to the Next Level
FREMONT, Calif. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - SGI
(NASDAQ: SGI), a trusted leader in technical computing, today announced
that the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), along
with the Norwegian Meteorological Institute (met.no), have selected SGI
to install a next generation SGI Altix ICE system built with the
future Intel Xeon processor series. NTNU and met.no intend to use this
new system to accelerate numerical weather predictions and to develop
atmospheric and oceanographic models for improved weather forecasting
for Norway and the adjacent seas. The high performance computing (HPC)
system also will play a vital role in supporting additional departments
at NTNU by providing a substantial increase in calculation capability so
that these Centers of Excellence may stay competitive on an
international level.
"NTNU and met.no have worked together for more than 20 years on high
performance computing systems for research and numerical weather
prediction," said Roar Skalin, director of Information Technology at the
Norwegian Meteorological Institute. "With this newest SGI Altix ICE
solution, the compute resources available for our numerical weather
prediction will increase by a factor of 20."
The system will consist of 13 next-generation Altix ICE cabinets
performing at over 275 teraflops, along with four SGI InfiniteStorage
16000 racks providing 1.2 petabytes of storage using the Lustre file
system. This configuration will allow met.no to use fine scale
operational atmospheric and oceanographic models to dramatically improve
weather forecasting for Norway and the adjacent seas. The new system
will allow the institute to run operational atmospheric models at a
resolution of 2.5km or better, and in parallel allow the researchers to
increase the usage of satellite observations.
"With this SGI technology collaboration, the Norwegian University of
Science and Technology and the Norwegian Meteorological Institute will
be able to greatly improve their weather forecasting capabilities, as
well as vastly accelerate time to insight for more standard applications
common to HPC academia," said Rod Evans, vice president of SGI EMEA.
"The flexibility and scalability of this next generation solution also
creates the foundation for an HPC system that can continue to grow
without disruption to their service as their requirements change and
expand."
The Altix ICE platform has been purposely built for high-performance
technical computing. The latest generation being purchased by NTNU adds
even greater flexibility, with a broader range of compute nodes,
topology types, InfiniBand fabric design, power, density, and cooling.
Altix ICE can scale seamlessly from 10 teraflops to 100 petaflops
without service interruption due to its unique architecture created with
the hierarchical management design, topology options, and integrated
InfiniBand switches that replace large, inflexible core switches.
"The ability to quickly and accurately forecast the weather is critical
to citizens and businesses of Norway and surrounding countries," said
Rajeeb Hazra, general manager of High Performance Computing at Intel.
"We are pleased to work with SGI to provide an HPC solution powered by
the next generation Intel Xeon processor series that can intelligently
adjust performance to data-intensive applications like those used by the
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) and the Norwegian
Meteorological Institute."
About SGI
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(c)2011 Silicon Graphics International Corp. All rights reserved. SGI, the
SGI logo and Altix are registered trademarks or trademarks of Silicon
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