
Princeton scientists (from left) Venkatramani Balaji, Jeroen Tromp and William Tang — shown at the Visualization Laboratory created by the Princeton Institute for Computational Science and Engineering — have received funding from the Group of Eight’s Research Councils Initiative on Multilateral Research Funding to support their work using exascale supercomputing technology. (Photo by Elle Starkman)
Princeton researchers working with supercomputers operating at a speed called the "exascale" are aiming to harness the power of this technology to solve a broad range of research problems. For example, climate modeler Venkatramani Balaji is focused on designing software to organize climate data from a massive archive that includes numerous models from around the world. The above model of sea surface temperatures depicts the Agulhas rings, a well-known feature of the currents around Southern Africa.
Image courtesy of the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory
Scientists at Princeton University are composing the complex codes designed to instruct a new class of powerful computers that will allow researchers to tackle problems that were previously too difficult to solve. These supercomputers, operating at a speed called the "exascale," will produce realistic simulations of dazzlingly complex phenomena in nature such as fusion reactions, earthquakes and climate change.
The capacity to deploy computations at such an extreme scale could put scientists closer to solving a wide range of research problems, including the quest to make fusion energy a safe, affordable power source, according to William Tang, head of the Fusion Simulation Program at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) . The new computing power would also greatly enhance the realism of simulations used in that research.
In recognition of the prospects for faster progress in the understanding of complex scientific issues — and as part of a new international collaboration — the Group of Eight’s (G-8) Research Councils Initiative on Multilateral Research Funding has awarded grants to Tang and two other Princeton-based scientists: Jeroen Tromp , a geophysicist; and Venkatramani Balaji , a climate modeler. All are focused on helping to develop the advanced software that will put the coming new generation of computers to work on solving problems of global interest.
"What we hope to demonstrate is that this focused level of international scientific collaboration can help deliver breakthrough payoffs in high-performance computing," said Tang, who is also a member of the executive committee of the Princeton Institute for Computational Science and Engineering (PICSciE) .
Computers approaching the exascale possess the capability of doing a quintillion — or a billion billion — calculations at once. Approximately a quintillion pennies laid out edge to edge would cover the surface of the Earth twice.
The three-year awards for the Princeton researchers are part of a pilot program established by the G-8 in 2010 to foster multinational collaboration among scientists. The G-8 is an organization involving leaders of some of the world’s largest industrialized nations, including Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States.
"There is recognition that science is international in scope and that there is an advantage to scientists from different countries partnering together," said Marc Rigas, staff associate for planning and coordination of the Office of Cyberinfrastructure at the National Science Foundation, which selected and funded the U.S.-based grantees for the G-8 council.
The Princeton grants are among six winning proposals selected from 100 international applicants’ submissions. All the projects require partnering with scientists from other G-8 nations. According to Tang, the grant selections were made after an intense peer review process.
Understanding fusion reactions
Tang intends to use his $470,000 grant to develop advanced simulation codes that will be compatible with the emerging class of supercomputers. The goal of his project, known as NuFuSe, is to produce higher-fidelity simulations of the physics behind fusion reactions. That will mean solving problems it would not be possible to address in a timely way using present-day supercomputers.
Working with researchers in the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan and Russia, Tang hopes to learn how to better control the behavior of magnetically confined fusion plasmas. Though fusion reactions are responsible for energy release in the universe, harnessing fusion as a clean and sustainable supply of energy on Earth is a major scientific and technological challenge. It has commanded the attention of researchers at laboratories worldwide, including PPPL.







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