NASA Center for Climate Simulation Expands Research Capabilities with Dell High-Performance Computing Technology

Dell is providing the NASA Center for Climate Simulation (NCCS), located at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD, with new Dell PowerEdge C6100 servers customized for high-performance computing (HPC) environments. The contract is worth up to $5.1 million dollars. With the new servers, NCCS users at Goddard and locations across the U.S. will conduct simulation modeling and data analysis to explore, understand and predict climate change.

NASA researchers will benefit from significant improvements in the Dell PowerEdge C6100’s system performance and reductions in energy consumption over previous generation servers - with anticipated improvements of 69 percent in performance and 47 percent in energy efficiency. The new servers will double NCCS computational capabilities to more than 300 trillion calculations per second. This increased performance will enable NCCS users to fine-tune global model resolutions to capture smaller-scale features in the atmosphere and oceans.

Launched this spring, the Dell PowerEdge C6100 is proving popular with universities and public and private sector research organizations committed to increasing HPC efficiency with open, affordable technologies. Its unique density and shared infrastructure enables organizations like NCCS to allocate systems management, space and time savings toward further innovation. Simplified systems installation also means customers can take advantage of the latest processors and emerging technologies more quickly.

“When we debuted the NASA Center for Climate Simulation this spring, we anticipated expanding our high-performance computing capabilities to meet the growing needs of NASA’s earth and space science user community. We chose to use Dell’s PowerEdge servers based upon both the commitment of Dell to the HPC community and the ability of their systems to scale with our program over time,” said Phil Webster, chief of Goddard's Computational and Information Sciences and Technology Office.
You must register or login in order to post comments.

Multimedia

Videos

Image Galleries

The Adventures of Kip and Gary

Diane Alber takes a humorous view of data center operations in her comic strip Kip and Gary. In the comic strip, Kip and Gary navigate problems familiar to data center professionals. You can see more at http://kipandgary.com/blog/

11/09/11 2:00 PM EST

Part 1: The Economics of Close-Coupled Cooling in the Data Center

Mission CriticalON-DEMAND: This presentation will detail the economics involved with each solution, CAPEX, OPEX, Total Cost of Ownership and payback to help make a complex challenge fundamentally easier to solve.

THE MAGAZINE

Mission Critical Magazine

march 2012 cover

2012 March-April

Mission Critical's latest issue is now available! Check it out!

TABLE OF CONTENTS SUBSCRIBE

PUE

Our Measured PUE is
See Poll Results Poll Archive

THE MISSION CRITICAL STORE

maintaining-mc.gif
Maintaining Mission Critical Systems in a 24/7 Environment, 2nd Edition

This book offers relevant insight into the Mission Critical Environment with an emphasis on business resiliency, data center efficiency, and green power technology.

More Products

Clear Seas Research

Clear Seas ResearchWith access to over one million professionals and more than 60 industry-specific publications,Clear Seas Research offers relevant insights from those who know your industry best. Let us customize a market research solution that exceeds your marketing goals.

Mission Critical Buyers Guide

Mission Critical's Buyers Guide: Find equipment and services for data center and emergency backup power applications. Click HERE to go to be taken to the MC Buyers Guide today!

STAY CONNECTED

facebook logo  LinkedInYouTube