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Supercomputing Equipment To Advance the Frontiers of Computational Biology
Troy, N.Y. — Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
will continue to advance the frontiers of computational science
with the help of IBM’s Blue Gene supercomputer. Awarded under
IBM’s Shared University Research (SUR) program, this Blue Gene
will complement the $100 million partnership between
Rensselaer, IBM, and New York state to create one of the
world’s most powerful university-based supercomputing
centers.
The equipment will provide a resource for scientists to gain
experience with the Blue Gene computing environment, while also
supporting a project to develop new simulation technologies for
understanding biological systems. The work will help
researchers develop algorithms and software that run
efficiently on Blue Gene technology, which is a key part of the
new Computational Center for Nanotechnology Innovations
(CCNI).
This $2.23 million gift of IBM equipment counts toward the
$1.4 billion Renaissance at Rensselaer campaign.
“This award further advances the strong partnership between
IBM and Rensselaer to develop a leading-edge, high-performance
computational capability,” said Rensselaer President Shirley
Ann Jackson. “It will allow our faculty and students to take
the lead in research that will enable key nanotechnology
innovations in the fields of energy, biotechnology, arts, and
medicine.”
As biology becomes a more quantitative field, researchers
need new simulation technologies to understand how proteins,
DNA, and other biological systems behave at the molecular
level, according to the Rensselaer research team. The new SUR
award is designed to help develop simulations for prototyping
medical devices in “virtual patients,” with potential
applications in targeted drug delivery systems such as drug
eluting stents, transdermal patches, and inhalers.
To be successful, these simulations must run efficiently and
effectively on the latest generation of high-performance
computing equipment. The project will help researchers develop
critical computational biology tools that operate on the Blue
Gene system, with the goal of making these available to a broad
community of users.
The project’s principal investigators at Rensselaer are
Angel Garcia, senior constellation chaired professor in
biocomputation and bioinformatics; Mark Shephard, the Samuel A.
and Elisabeth C. Johnson Jr. Professor of Engineering and
director of the Scientific Computation Research Center; Shekhar
Garde, the Elaine and Jack S. Parker Career Development
Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering; and Kenneth
Jansen, associate professor of mechanical, aerospace, and
nuclear engineering.
The new Blue Gene system consists of a single rack with
1,024 dual processor compute nodes, 32 I/O nodes, a service
node, a front-end node, and multiple terabytes of SAN-based
disk storage.
Announced in May 2006, the Computational Center for
Nanotechnology Innovations (CCNI) is a $100 million partnership
between Rensselaer, IBM, and New York state to create one of
the world’s most powerful university-based supercomputing
centers, and a top supercomputing center of any kind in the
world. The center is designed to help continue the impressive
advances in shrinking device dimensions seen by electronics
manufacturers, and to enable key nanotechnology innovations in
the fields of energy, biotechnology, arts, and medicine. Learn
more at the CCNI Web site: http://rpi.edu/research/ccni/index.html.
About the Campaign
The $1.4 billion Renaissance at Rensselaer: The
Campaign for Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, launched in
2004, fuels the Institute’s strategic Rensselaer Plan,
and supports groundbreaking interdisciplinary programs which
have at their core the technologies driving innovations in the
21st century: biotechnology, nanotechnology, computational
information technology, energy and the environment and
experimental media and the arts. The campaign aims to build the
Institute unrestricted endowment, and also seeks funds for
endowed scholarships and fellowships, faculty positions,
curriculum support, student life programs, and athletic
programs and facilities. To date, the effort has raised more
than $1.2 billion.
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Published
December 7,
2006 |
Contact: Jason Gorss
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: gorssj@rpi.edu |
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