New Supercluster to Probe Secrets of the Universe; Large Supercluster Installed At University of Manchester is Built With Dolphin Interconnect's High Performance WulfKit.Business Editors/High-Tech Writers NATICK, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 13, 2001 A powerful 91-node/182-processor supercluster su·per·clus·ter n. A group of neighboring clusters of galaxies. supercluster A large group of neighboring clusters of galaxies, along with isolated galaxies scattered between them, the entire collection computer is being installed at the University of Manchester The University of Manchester is a university located in Manchester, England. With over 40,000 students studying 500 academic programmes, more than 10,000 staff and an annual income of nearly £600 million it is the largest single-site University in the United Kingdom and receives (Cheshire, UK) to provide a real-time processing backend for the Lovell Radio Telescope at the Jodrell Bank Observatory Jodrell Bank Observatory (jôd`rəl), observatory for radio astronomy located at Jodrell Bank, Macclesfield, Cheshire, England. Founded in 1945 on the site of a botanical experiment station, it is administered by the Univ. of Manchester. . It will be known by the acronym COBRA (Coherent On-line Baseband Receiver for Astronomy). According to Professor Andrew Lyne, director of Jodrell Bank Observatory, "COBRA will provide a major new resource for many areas of astrophysics studied at the Jodrell Bank Observatory. In particular, it will enable a quantum leap in the science from our world-leading instruments, such as the upgraded 76m Lovell Telescope, which will be available next year." The Lovell Telescope is currently undergoing a major two million UK pound upgrade to increase its sensitivity and accuracy. The addition of the COBRA supercluster, which is capable of processing data coming from the telescope in real time, will enable scientists at the Observatory to take full advantage of the increased accuracy of the radio telescope. Jodrell Bank is the world leader in pulsar research -- its astronomers have discovered three-quarters of the 1,400 currently known pulsars. Pulsars are rapidly rotating, highly magnetized neutron stars that produce beams of radio emission. These emissions enable scientists to study the rotation of a pulsar with great precision. Pulsar timing has broad application in astrophysical experiments, from studying the internal structure of neutron stars and the properties of the interstellar medium to testing Einstein's theory of general relativity. Unfortunately the radio pulses suffer dispersion in the interstellar medium, resulting in the broadening of the pulses, which limits the accuracy of the timing and any subsequent measurement. COBRA will remove this broadening, using 'coherent dedispersion' across the wide observing bandwidth of 100MHz (MegaHertZ) One million cycles per second. It is used to measure the transmission speed of electronic devices, including channels, buses and the computer's internal clock. A one-megahertz clock (1 MHz) means some number of bits (16, 32, 64, etc. , greatly increasing the sensitivity and timing precision over existing equipment. The supercluster computer effectively provides a new generation of general-purpose digital radio-astronomical receiver that can be used to perform any function of existing instruments simply through changes in the software. In addition to pulsar observing, COBRA will be used for other online observations, for example methanol emission lines from astronomical objects. Off-line uses of COBRA include pulsar searching and hydrodynamical simulations of astrophysical phenomena. Pulsar searching involves analysis of recorded data, looking for patterns that identify previously undiscovered pulsars. "COBRA will enable us to search for pulsars in binary systems where the pulsar orbits another star," said Dr. Michael Kramer, a pulsar researcher at the Observatory. "With COBRA we will be able to implement a new concept for observations of pulsars. With the increased precision of our measurements, we can probe the existing limits of physics. But COBRA will also serve as a prototype for a general radio-astronomical receiver of the future: the digital software receiver," Dr. Kramer explained. According to Dr. Anthony Holloway, IT manager for Jodrell Bank Observatory, "COBRA will also be amongst the most powerful superclusters in astrophysics research today, enabling a wide range of new science." COBRA is being built and installed by Amersham-based Workstations UK using a proprietary PC-cluster platform, the MIMCluster20. Each of the 91 nodes in the cluster features dual Pentium III Tualatin 1.13 GHz processors for a total of 182 processors. The nodes are interconnected in a two-dimensional switching architecture using Dolphin Interconnect's WulfKit, the performance leader in high-speed interconnects. WulfKit is a combination of a Scalable Coherent Interface (hardware, protocol) Scalable Coherent Interface - (SCI) The ANSI/IEEE 1596-1992 standard that defines a point-to-point interface and a set of packet protocols. The SCI protocols use packets with a 16-byte header and 16, 64, or 256 data bytes. (SCI (Scalable Coherent Interface) An IEEE standard for a high-speed bus that uses wire or fiber-optic cable. It can transfer data up to 1GBytes/sec. (hardware) SCI - 1. Scalable Coherent Interface. 2. UART. ) network interconnect card (NIC (1) (Network Interface Card) See network adapter. See also InterNIC. (2) (New Internet Computer) An earlier Linux-based computer from The New Internet Computer Company (NICC), Palo Alto, CA. ) developed by Oslo-based Dolphin Interconnect, and a powerful message-passing interface (MPI MPI - Message Passing Interface ) developed by Scali, also located in Oslo, Norway. Very large clusters can be built and managed using WulfKit. Other notable installations include a 256-processor supercluster at the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). Santa Cruz, a 182-processor supercluster at Pennsylvania State University Pennsylvania State University, main campus at University Park, State College; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855, opened 1859 as Farmers' High School. (Penn State), and a 192-processor system at the Center for Parallel Processing in Paderborn, Germany. COBRA is made possible by a grant from the Joint Research Equipment Initiative (JREI JREI Japan Real Estate Institute JREI Joint Research Equipment Initiatives (UK) ) administered by the Higher Education Funding Council for England The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) is a non-departmental public body of the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (previously the Department for Education and Skills) in the United Kingdom which distributes funding to Universities and (HEFCE HEFCE Higher Education Funding Council for England (UK) ). About Dolphin Interconnect Dolphin Interconnect, with headquarters in Oslo, Norway, develops and manufactures high-speed, high-bandwidth interconnect products based on the scalable coherent interface (SCI). Dolphin Interconnect products and technologies enable customers to build cost effective, highly scalable, enterprise-class clustering solutions with standards-based hardware and software. For additional information, visit www.dolphinics.com. Note: Dolphin Interconnect, PCI-SCI, WulfKit and WulfKit3 are trademarks of Dolphin Interconnect Solutions Dolphin Interconnect Solutions (OSE: DOLP) is a manufacturer of high speed data communication systems, located in Oslo, Norway (headquarters) and Natick, Massachusetts, USA (US Customer Support and Logistics. , Inc., in the United States and other countries. All other registered trademarks, trademarks and service marks are the property of their respective owners. For more information about Jodrell Bank Observatory, visit: http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/. For more information about Workstations UK, visit: www.workstationsuk.co.uk. For more information about Scali, visit: www.scali.com. |
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