The group was shortlisted for the award — commonly referred to as the ‘Nobel Prize of supercomputing’ — for their work developing data pipelines for the future Square Kilometre Array (SKA) telescope and testing them on the Summit supercomputer.
The team used Summit — the world’s fastest supercomputer at the time — to process simulated observations of the early universe ahead of the telescope being built in Western Australia and South Africa.
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) director of Data Intensive Astronomy Professor Andreas Wicenec, who is based at UWA, said construction of the billion-dollar SKA project was expected to begin next year.
"When complete, the SKA will be the world’s largest radio telescope and one of the world’s largest data generators. The low frequency part of the telescope alone is set to have more than 130,000 antennas in its initial phase, generating around 550 gigabytes of data every second," he said.
To process data on this scale, Professor Wicenec explained that the team used a cluster of 4,560 computers, featuring 27,360 high-end GPUs and 191,520 CPU cores.
"The whole simulation ran for about three hours at an average of 64.9 PFLOPs, or 64,900,000,000,000,000 mathematical operations, per second. The highest writing data rate we achieved was 925GB a second, and the effective throughput of the complete simulation was about a factor of two better than what is required by the SKA," he explained.
Professor Wicenec said the team was surprised but thrilled to be a finalist in the Gordon Bell Prize: "I didn’t expect it at all given the calibre of previous winners and the highly-sophisticated nature of their projects. We didn’t have the Gordon Bell Prize in mind when we set out to do this work, so it’s fantastic to be recognised for the remarkable performance the multinational team achieved."
The project was a collaboration between ICRAR, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and Shanghai Astronomical Observatory (SHAO). The group’s nomination for the award was supported by SKA director general Professor Philip Diamond and US National Radio Astronomy Observatory director Dr Tony Beasley.
The ACM Gordon Bell Prize was established in the 1980s with a nominal $100 prize for anyone who could overcome Amdahl’s Law and demonstrate that parallel computing made sense.
Today, the prize continues to track the progress of parallel computing, while rewarding innovation in applying high-performance computing to science, engineering, and large-scale data analytics. In previous years, finalists have presented their work in person ahead of an award ceremony at the annual SC supercomputing conference.
In 2020, the conference and award ceremony were held virtually, with the prize ultimately awarded to a nine-member team, drawn from Chinese and American institutions, for their project, "Pushing the limit of molecular dynamics with ab initio accuracy to 100 million atoms with machine learning".
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