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Square Kilometre Array software prototype runs on Chinese supercomputer

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A prototype part of the software system to manage data from the Square Kilometre Array telescope has successfully run on the world's second-fastest supercomputer in China.

The International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), a joint venture between Curtin University and The University of Western Australia, has announced that software prototyped for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) has been tested on the Tianhe-2 supercomputer in China.

The successful deployment of the prototype science data processor execution framework was carried out on the world's second-fastest supercomputer out of the National Super Computing Center in Guangzhou, China.

The test was conducted by an international team led by professor Tao An from Shanghai Astronomical Observatory in China and professor Andreas Wicenec, head of data intensive astronomy at the ICRAR, in Western Australia, with the test forming part of the Science Data Processor work package for the SKA, led by the University of Cambridge in England.
According to the ICRAR, the execution framework provides the control and monitoring environment to execute millions of tasks, consuming and producing millions of data items on thousands of individual computers -- the scale of processing required for each SKA observation obtained within a six to 12 hour period.

The SKA has been slated to be the largest and most capable radio telescope ever constructed, with ICRAR calling it the world's largest science project, covering over 1 million square metres of collecting area.

Scheduled to begin construction in 2018, the SKA is an international project which will consist of thousands of antennas spread across the world, with central cores of operation in South Africa and Western Australia. Its central computer alone will have the processing power of about 100 million PCs.

At 50,000 times more sensitive than any other radio instrument currently in existence and powerful enough to detect very faint radio signals emitted by cosmic sources billions of light years away from Earth -- including those emitted shortly after the Big Bang, over 13 billion years ago -- the SKA is expected to help scientists answer fundamental questions about the universe and the laws of nature.

Wicenec said the complete system currently being designed will process such raw observations and convert them into a form that can be analysed by astronomers.

"It is known as the SKA Science Data Processor, or the 'brain' of the telescope", Wicenec said.

The Australian professor said the execution framework of the science data processor is "data activated", meaning individual data items are wrapped in an active piece of software that automatically triggers the applications needed to process it.

"Whenever a data item is ready, that's triggering the next task -- the task is not running idle, waiting for anything," he said.

The prototype was initially run on 500 compute nodes of the supercomputer and was then extended to 1,000 nodes. The ICRAR confirmed the next step would be to "ramp up" the number of individual items that are getting deployed and then increase the number of computer nodes to near 8,500.

The system is now running 66,000 items and the next stage will be a few million, with Wicenec hoping to push this out to between 50 million and 60 million items on 8,500 or 10,000 nodes.

As part of the federal government's AU$1.1 billion National Innovation and Science Agenda unveiled in December, AU$294 million was given to hostthe West Australian sector of the SKA, with the government saying the SKA will deliver significant economic, scientific, and technological benefits to the country.

http://www.zdnet.com/article/square...ware-prototype-runs-on-chinese-supercomputer/
 
The test was conducted by an international team led by professor Tao An from Shanghai Astronomical Observatory in China and professor Andreas Wicenec, head of data intensive astronomy at the ICRAR, in Western Australia, with the test forming part of the Science Data Processor work package for the SKA, led by the University of Cambridge in England.


Good news! Glad to see Shanghai Astronomical Observatory and Guangzhou National Super Computing Center (Tianhe-2 Supercomputer) contributing to SKA project. After Australia and South Africa, is there a plan to build SKA in the northern hemisphere, say China?

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http://www.upi.com/Science_News/201...h-second-fastest-supercomputer/5751471871662/
 
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Can't wait for the upgraded Tianhe-2A, and hopefully it can beat the Taihulight.


I believe various supercomputers including upgraded Tianhe-2A, TaihuLight or newly built ones will continue to make good progress and lead the world. Though China impose strict export ban of supercomputer tech and equipment, it will not hinder provision of computing support to foreign or international projects, especially in natural science and purposes for betterment of mankind, SKA is a very good example.

https://www.hpcwire.com/off-the-wire/china-to-ban-supercomputer-exports/
 
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I believe various supercomputers including upgraded Tianhe-2A, TaihuLight or newly built ones will continue to make good progress and lead the world. Though China impose strict export ban of supercomputer tech and equipment, it will not hinder provision of computing support to foreign or international projects, especially in natural science and purposes for betterment of mankind, SKA is a very good example.

https://www.hpcwire.com/off-the-wire/china-to-ban-supercomputer-exports/

Good, I also hope that the Taihulight team could win the bid to build the world's first exaflop supercomputer.
 
I believe various supercomputers including upgraded Tianhe-2A, TaihuLight or newly built ones will continue to make good progress and lead the world. Though China impose strict export ban of supercomputer tech and equipment, it will not hinder provision of computing support to foreign or international projects, especially in natural science and purposes for betterment of mankind, SKA is a very good example.

https://www.hpcwire.com/off-the-wire/china-to-ban-supercomputer-exports/
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What goes around comes around. The world is changing, we now have the "new normal".

In the past, it was western countries that ban high tech exports to China and other countries such as Russia.
See this quote.

The US government banned processors used in Chinese supercomputers some months ago, citing information security concerns.
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Now, China is giving the west a taste of their own medicine. Besides banning supercomputer tech, China is also banning some drone technology too.

The ban, which will be effective from mid-August, urges manufacturers not to export drones that are capable of flying in gusty winds, hovering above 15,420 meters and having more than an hour of flight duration.

Computers with greater than 8 tera floating-point operations per second will also not be allowed for exports, said an announcement jointly issued by the Ministry of Commerce and the General Administration of Customs. It is the first time that China is imposing export restrictions on such products.

This is hilarious. :rofl:

On a serious note, every country should be looking after their interests. There are no permanent allies, just interests.
 
.
What goes around comes around. The world is changing, we now have the "new normal".

In the past, it was western countries that ban high tech exports to China and other countries such as Russia.
See this quote.


.
Now, China is giving the west a taste of their own medicine. Besides banning supercomputer tech, China is also banning some drone technology too.



This is hilarious. :rofl:

On a serious note, every country should be looking after their interests. There are no permanent allies, just interests.


Yes, China imposed exports ban on supercomputer, as well as drone.

Banning these two techs is understandable, but the timing is interesting: China announced the ban simultaneously in one administrative order. Coincidence and convenience? Any relationship between the two techs? In future warfare, will these two techs work as one?
 

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