HPC centre to research parallel computing for application in materials science, meteorology and data analytics

Pro
Pictured left is Dr Jim Browne, NUI Galway, and Martin Curley, Intel vice president and director of Intel Labs Europe and and Professor JC Desplat. (Source: NUI Galway)

20 January 2014

The Irish Centre for High End Computing (ICHEC) at NUI Galway and Intel have agreed to pursue research that will have applications in areas such as materials science, meteorology and data analytics.

The agreement to establish the ‘Intel Parallel Computing Centre between NUI Galway and Intel’ was announced by NUI Galway president Dr Jim Browne and Intel vice president and director of Intel Labs Europe, Martin Curley at a ceremony in NUI Galway.

The new parallel computing efforts aim to significantly improve parallelism, scalability and efficiencies of existing High Performance Computing applications.

“We in NUI Galway are proud of our long association with ICHEC, since its establishment and are very pleased to support their ongoing work,” said Dr Jim Browne, president, NUI Galway. “We believe that ICHEC’s mission is vital for Ireland and that its services are very important to academia and industry alike. Today’s signing is a wonderful example of the work of ICHEC. We are delighted to be working with Intel in this way and look forward to our continuing partnership.”

Intel will fund the research programme led by director of the ICHEC, Professor JC Desplat. The programme will foster the uptake of current and next generation Intel many core technology, such as the Intel Xeon Phi Coprocessor.

“Intel is pleased to expand our Intel Parallel Computing Centre program by collaborating with National University of Ireland, Galway and ICHEC,” said Intel vice president and director of Intel Labs Europe, Martin Curley. “This new centre creates an opportunity for Intel, NUI Galway and ICHEC to innovate and optimize applications which benefit industry and science in Ireland, Europe, and globally.”

“ICHEC has been chosen for this programme following its track record of excellence in many-core solutions,” said Professor JC Desplat, principal investigator. “We are delighted to be part of the development of this exciting new technology. As a country, Ireland excels in the effective use of high-performance computing, and today’s partnership consolidates that standing. The outcome of this ambitious programme will be improved software solutions in areas such as materials science, weather forecasting and data analytics.”

 

TechCentral Reporters

Read More:


Back to Top ↑

TechCentral.ie