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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: supercomputer simulation + missing matter + help  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

Intel, SGI To Work On NASA Supercomputer
InformationWeek, NY - May 8, 2008
The high-powered machine will be used for modeling and simulation at the space agency's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. ...

The Tech Herald
Nasa set to join petaflop elite
BBC News, UK - May 8, 2008
... fidelity" modelling and simulation of future missions. Nasa has used its current supercomputer to investigate the performance of hypersonic aircraft, ...
Nasa supercomputer gets rocket power Silicon.com
NASA?s Pleiades Project to speed up exploration of universe iTWire
NASA set to boost supercomputer capacity The Tech Herald
NetworkWorld.com
all 23 news articles »
Modeling Supernovae With a Supercomputer
Slashdot - May 4, 2008
... used will be a half guess. supercomputer or not, results will be speculative at best. by chanrobi (944359) Which is why it's called a simulation. ...
76-teraflop Supercomputer Installed For Critical Research On ...
Science Daily (press release) - May 8, 2008
Bluefire is the second phase of a system called the Integrated Computing Environment for Scientific Simulation (ICESS) at NCAR. ...
Climate Researchers Tap 4000-Chip IBM Supercomputer
InformationWeek, NY - May 8, 2008
Bluefire is part of NCAR's effort to build a computing platform called the Integrated Environment for Scientific Simulation. The system is set to go live in ...
Supercomputer makes a big impact at Audi
Malta Independent Online, Malta - May 11, 2008
The faster the computer, the more definitive and certain the accident simulation will be. Developers conduct about 5000 simulations each week ? from frontal ...
Army program does not violate university policy, Senate committee ...
Stanford Report - May 7, 2008
The terms were negotiated by Charbel Farhat, a professor of mechanical engineering and expert on supercomputer simulation who serves as the director of the ...
Supercomputer To Simulate Extreme Stellar Physics
Science Daily (press release) - May 2, 2008
The Flash Center was founded in 1997 with a grant from the National Nuclear Security Administration?s Office of Advanced Simulation and Computing. ...
Intel, SGI to build 10 PFlops supercomputer for NASA
TG Daily - May 7, 2008
As NASA?s Columbia supercomputer, currently listed at #20 in the list of the world?s 500 fastest supercomputers, is past its prime time, the new Pleiades is ...
NASA, Intel, SGI Plan to "Soup Up" Supercomputer TMCnet
all 3 news articles »
Evolution of the supercomputer
Laptop Logic, CA - May 7, 2008
So they approached Tensilica to help them created embedded hardware that would be tailor made specifically for weather simulation.
Source: Google News

The Case of the Missing Dwarves
G Schilling - ScienceNOW, 2004 - sciencenow.sciencemag.org
... Missing dwarves. ... small satellites, like the ones shown in this supercomputer simulation.
CREDIT: NATIONAL CENTER FOR SUPERCOMPUTER APPLICATIONS/ANDREY KRAVTSOV. ...

Found: Candidate for Missing Mass? -
G Taubes - Science, 1995 - sciencemag.org
Page 1. EERESEARCH NEWSm Ac .u>R* V .V Found: Candidate for Missing Mass? ... andth the
mass of an electron. ponent of the invisible dark matter that 2 ...

Density Profiles of Cold Dark Matter Substructure: Implications for the Missing-Satellites Problem -
S Kazantzidis, L Mayer, C Mastropietro, J Diemand, … - The Astrophysical Journal, 2004 - UChicago Press
... circular velocity of the surrounding dark matter halo at ... revisiting the solution
to the missing-satellites problem ... results of S02, using a simulation with a ...

[PDF] Cold+ Hot Dark Matter After Super-Kamiokande -
JR Primack, MAK Gross - Arxiv preprint astro-ph/9810204, 1998 - arxiv.org
... This would look for missing ? ... oscillation data if neutrinos are massive enough to
be hot dark matter. ... m ? 0.4, we have run a supercomputer simulation ...

Brain-scale simulation of the neocortex on the IBM Blue Gene/L supercomputer -
M Djurfeldt, M Lundqvist, C Johansson, M Rehn, ? … - IBM J Res Dev Special Issue on Applications of Massively …, 2007 - research.ibm.com
... column on an IBM Blue Gene/L* (BG/L) supercomputer. ... and in filling in where empirical
data is still missing. ... The simulation showed that this is indeed the case ...
-

Astronomy: Primordial Gas: Fog Not Clouds -
C Seife - Science, 1997 - sciencemag.org
... between the Davidsen-Bi picture and the simulation results ... and Bi bypassed 500 hours
of supercomputer time ... early universe--the full amount that had been missing. ...

Warp and Woof -
D Voss, R Coontz - Science, 2008 - sciencemag.org
... (p. 52) discuss supercomputer simulations that ... New simulation techniques will have
to provide higher resolution ... The missing baryons might be lurking in the ...

[PDF] Dark and baryonic matter in the MareNostrum Universe -
S Gottl?ber, G Yepes, A Khalatyan, R Sevilla, V … - Arxiv preprint astro-ph/0610622, 2006 - arxiv.org
... substantial fraction of the so-called missing baryons in ... like to thank the Barcelona
Supercomputer Center for allowing us to run the simulation described above ...
-

Early Experience with Scientific Applications on the Blue Gene/L Supercomputer -
G Almasi, G Bhanot, D Chen, M Eleftheriou, B Fitch … - Proceedings of the Euro-Par 2005 Parallel Processing: 11th …, 2005 - Springer
... The Case of the Missing Supercomputer Perform- ance: Achieving ... 9. TOP500 Supercomputer
Sites, http://www.top500.org ... frame- work for molecular simulation on Blue ...

Dark Matter Substructure and Gamma-Ray Annihilation in the Milky Way Halo -
J Diemand, M Kuhlen, P Madau - The Astrophysical Journal, 2007 - UChicago Press
... completed in 320,000 CPU hours on NASA's Project Columbia supercomputer, currently
one ... TABLE 1 Simulation Parameters. ... A ?Missing Inner Satellites? Problem? ...

Source: Google Scholar

CU-Boulder supercomputer simulation of universe may help in search for missing matter

Much of the gaseous mass of the universe is bound up in a tangled web of cosmic filaments that stretch for hundreds of millions of light-years, according to a new supercomputer study by a team led by the University of Colorado at Boulder.

The study indicated a significant portion of the gas is in the filaments -- which connect galaxy clusters -- hidden from direct observation in enormous gas clouds in intergalactic space known as the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium, or WHIM, said CU-Boulder Professor Jack Burns of the astrophysical and planetary sciences department. The team performed one of the largest cosmological supercomputer simulations ever, cramming 2.5 percent of the visible universe inside a computer to model a region more than 1.5 billion light-years across. One light-year is equal to about six trillion miles.

A paper on the subject will be published in the Dec. 10 issue of the Astrophysical Journal. In addition to Burns, the paper was authored by CU-Boulder Research Associate Eric Hallman of APS, Brian O'Shea of Los Alamos National Laboratory, Michael Norman and Rick Wagner of the University of California, San Diego and Robert Harkness of the San Diego Supercomputing Center.

It took the researchers nearly a decade to produce the extraordinarily complex computer code that drove the simulation, which incorporated virtually all of the known physical conditions of the universe reaching back in time almost to the Big Bang, said Burns. The simulation -- which uses advanced numerical techniques to zoom-in on interesting structures in the universe -- modeled the motion of matter as it collapsed due to gravity and became dense enough to form cosmic filaments and galaxy structures.

"We see this as a real breakthrough in terms of technology and in scientific advancement," said Burns. "We believe this effort brings us a significant step closer to understanding the fundamental constituents of the universe."

According to the standard cosmological model, the universe consists of about 25 percent dark matter and 70 percent dark energy around 5 percent normal matter, said Burns. Normal matter consists primarily of baryons - hydrogen, helium and heavier elements -- and observations show that about 40 percent of the baryons are currently unaccounted for. Many astrophysicists believe the missing baryons are in the WHIM, Burns said.

"In the coming years, I believe these filaments may be detectable in the WHIM using new state-of-the-art telescopes," said Burns, who along with Hallman is a fellow at CU-Boulder's Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy. "We think that as we begin to see these filaments and understand their nature, we will learn more about the missing baryons in the universe."

Two of the key telescopes that astrophysicists will use in their search for the WHIM are the 10-meter South Pole Telescope in Antarctica and the 25-meter Cornell-Caltech Atacama Telescope, or CCAT, being built in Chile's Atacama Desert, Burns said. CU-Boulder scientists are partners in both observatories.

The CCAT telescope will gather radiation from sub-millimeter wavelengths, which are longer than infrared waves but shorter than radio waves. It will enable astronomers to peer back in time to when galaxies first appeared -- just a billion years or so after the Big Bang -- allowing them to probe the infancy of the objects and the process by which they formed, said Burns.

The South Pole Telescope looks at millimeter, sub-millimeter and microwave wavelengths of the spectrum and is used to search for, among other things, cosmic microwave background radiation - the cooled remnants of the Big Bang, said Burns. Researchers hope to use the telescopes to estimate heating of the cosmic background radiation as it travels through the WHIM, using the radiation temperature changes as a tracer of sorts for the massive filaments.

The CU-Boulder-led team ran the computer code for a total of about 500,000 processor hours at two supercomputing centers --the San Diego Supercomputer Center and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The team generated about 60 terabytes of data during the calculations, equivalent to three-to-four times the digital text in all the volumes in the U.S. Library of Congress, said Burns.

Burns said the sophisticated computer code used for the universe simulation is similar in some respects to a code used for complex supercomputer simulations of Earth's atmosphere and climate change, since both investigations focus heavily on fluid dynamics.

###

The Astrophysical Journal study was funded by NASA, the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy through the Los Alamos National Laboratory.

 
 
 
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