Tim Brewer, a consultant, shows EPSCoR intern Robin Rasmussen Mt. Moran |
How do you model a sustainable future?
This is part of what CI-WATER collaborators
will be discussing at the Second Annual CI-WATER Symposium next week, and the
answer, in part, lies within racks of black, plastic, electronic boxes, called
nodes. These boxes, complete with rows of blinking lights, may not look
impressive on the outside, but they make up the supercomputers housed in
Wyoming and Utah, which are vital to CI-WATER research.
A supercomputer is a collection of normal
computers which operates faster and allows for higher quality computational
research. One such supercomputer used by CI-WATER is Mt. Moran, housed at the
University of Wyoming. Mt. Moran, which was put into production in February
2013, is an important addition to research resources at UW, because it is the
first supercomputer available solely to UW researchers and their collaborators.
It has opened up research capabilities and is changing the way researchers do
computational research at UW.
The storage space called Bighorn |
“Before, what people were doing was running
computational analysis at their workstations at their desks or making small
clusters,” says Timothy Kuhfuss, the director of the Advanced Research
Computing Center (ARCC).
Computational analysis on these systems was
slow and often required graduate students on big research projects to manage
these systems when their time and skills may have been better used elsewhere.
These graduate students can now work on Mt. Moran, along with their faculty
advisers and UW collaborators, such as CI-WATER partners in Utah. Without this
resource, researchers on the CI-WATER grant would have a harder time developing
the models which will help them better understand water resources in the
western United States.
Mt. Moran’s location on the UW campus is just
as important as its capabilities because it adds to the environment ARCC
strives for in assisting its users.
Mt. Moran |
“People like someone local to work with,”
says Kuhfuss. “Rather than work with someone across the country, they can
literally walk into the office down the hall here and talk with one of our
consultants.”
Working one on one with consultants is part
of the process when using Mt. Moran and allows for more personalized use of the
computing capabilities.
“We want to make it real simple,” says
Kuhfuss. “Once researchers apply for an account and have one on the machine, we
set up a project space for them. Then, they can look at the ‘how-to’
documentation on the webpage that we point them to. Or, if they’re not the type
who wants to use those resources, they can come to our offices and sit down
with a consultant who will just get them going.”
Mt. Moran requires far more power than normal computing systems |
To date, Mt. Moran is at 98% of its capacity
and is used by 115 researchers. CI-WATER researchers at UW rely on this
resource to do the base work for their models, which they then move to the
bigger NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center (NWSC) outside of Cheyenne, WY. These
supercomputers allow for all CI-WATER researchers to examine and evaluate the
future of water in the west, through the creation of models for a sustainable
future.
By Kali S. McCrackin
Photos by Kali S. McCrackin
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