Schools
UWM At Waukesha: UWM Awarded Grant To Upgrade Its Campus Supercomputing Cluster
The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee has been awarded funding from the National Science Foundation to upgrade the university's aging su ...
August 6, 2021
The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee has been awarded funding from the National Science Foundation to upgrade the universityβs aging supercomputing infrastructure. The $400,000 grant will expand campus research capabilities and research-related educational opportunities.
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Supercomputers are used in fields that require high-speed computation, such as weather forecasting, physical simulation, molecular modeling and astrophysics. However, UWMβs cluster, which was established in 2009, is no longer powerful enough to accommodate many researchersβ needs.
βSupercomputing looms large in both the volume and funding associated with UWMβs computation-intensive research,β said Robert Beck, UWM associate vice chancellor and chief information officer. βThese NSF grant funds will add unique resources not currently available within our aging cluster environment.β
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The need for computation in research has exploded over the last 10 years, said Dan Siercks, interim director of research computing. Last year alone, the supercomputing cluster ran more than 600,000 computational jobs, and seven of the top 10 research projects at UWM used the cluster.
Designing a model that works
Philip Chang, associate professor of physics, recruited 11 other researchers across disciplines to write the grant. Coauthors on the grant represented UWM research in astrophysics, atmospheric science, cancer research, genomics, fluid dynamics, biophysics and quantum mechanics.
βWe found that no single kind of supercomputer would satisfy all the competing requirements for different computational projects in terms of computing, storage and memory,β Chang said, βso we designed one that does.β
This new investment will support science and engineering throughout the region, not just UWM, Chang said.
βInnovation sparked by the research will directly drive high-end industrial development and the resulting economic rewards,β he said.
For example, Professor Ryo Amanoβs research involves modeling the performance of turbine blades for wind energy, and Associate Professor Kevin Renken optimizes heat exchangers used in air separation plants and transport industries. Both require simulation software with hefty computing requirements.
Distributed computing consortium
The upgrade also will allow UWM to participate more fully in the Open Science Grid, a distributed computing consortium that includes 42 universities, including UW-Madison and UWM.
Distributed computing links many partnersβ individual supercomputing clusters so that the idle time of any computers across the consortium can be used to process large datasets. βThe idea is to keep the computers of all partners in use all the time,β said Siercks, and that increases the high-performance computing resources for partners.
The new supercomputer will have educational benefits as well. In the next five years, between 60 and 100 undergraduates will use the cluster for education and research, while more than 100 graduate students will use it for coursework and research. And it will enhance UWMβs ability to recruit and retain students from underrepresented groups in the STEM disciplines.
Besides Chang, Renken and Amano, the following researchers helped write the grant: Sarah Vigeland, David Kaplan, Abbas Ourmazd, Peter Schwander, Russell Fung and Michael Weinert from physics; Clark Evans from atmospheric science; Mahsa Dabagh from engineering; and Rebecca Klaper from freshwater sciences.
The grant comes from the NSFβs Campus Cyberinfrastructure program, which invests in campus-level networking and cyberinfrastructure improvements for science applications and distributed research projects.
This press release was produced by UWM at Waukesha. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.