2025-02-13
Companies
2024-12-23
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AUSTIN, Texas — A powerful new supercomputer that will enable dynamic open science research projects in the U.S. is in full production in the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at The University of Texas at Austin.
For more than a decade, the Stampede systems — Stampede (2012), Stampede2 (2017) and now Stampede3 (2024) — have been flagships in the National Science Foundation’s scientific supercomputing ecosystem. Made possible by a $10 million award from the NSF, Stampede3 will enable computational and data-driven science and engineering research and education.
“During our pre-production period, users experienced capabilities such as an increase in speed-up for scientific applications due to better memory bandwidth per core provided by the Intel Xeon CPU Max processors,” said Tommy Minyard, TACC’s director of Advanced Computing Systems and principal investigator of the Stampede3 project. “And for the first time, we are using a storage system with no spinning disk — we are expecting a significant improvement for users in their I/O performance and reliability.”
Tommy Minyard, Director of Advanced Computing Systems and Principal Investigator of the Stampede3 project, Texas Advanced Computing Center
TACC continues its partnerships with Dell Technologies and Intel on Stampede3, a nearly 10 petaflop system offering tremendous capability for diverse scientific applications. Stampede3 offers substantial new computing capability, while also re-purposing hardware from previous NSF investments to support high-throughput users.
Stampede3 brings a significant increase in computational and data capabilities to the science and engineering research community,” said Katie Antypas, office director for the NSF’s Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure. “The new high-bandwidth memory node architecture as well as the all-flash filesystem will accelerate a wide range of applications, and I expect it will be in high demand by the user community.”
More than 450 distinct users ran a half million jobs during the pre-production period. The system will enable thousands of researchers nationwide to investigate questions that require advanced computing power ranging from data analysis in biology to supersonic turbulence flows to atomistic simulations on a wide range of materials.
A few of the early users and projects include:
TACC also added an experimental GPU hardware subsystem for artificial intelligence and machine learning, further advancing the University’s Year of AI initiative and highlighting the AI data processing capabilities available only at UT.
Stampede3 delivers:
Stampede3 will serve the open science community from 2024 through 2029.