With the U.S. Government increasingly using high-performance computing
(HPC) to address current and future national challenges, Intel
Corporation today announced it has been awarded two subcontracts
totaling $19 million with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). As part
of these two awards, Intel® Federal LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary, will
be a major participant in the Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC
(LLNS) managed Extreme-Scale Computing Research and Development
“FastForward” program aimed at driving advancements in exascale
computing.
The DOE has been a leading developer of supercomputing technology for a
broad range of critical applications in the space of national security,
economy, energy resources and consumption. The “FastForward” program
will harness the talents of the national laboratories, academia and U.S.
industry to develop the next generation of HPC technologies.
Intel Federal, which offers the U.S. Government access to the breadth
and depth of Intel’s capabilities in research, development, prototyping
and engineering services, will combine innovative and traditional
activities to achieve improved resilience on next-generation,
energy-efficient scalable processor technology. Intel’s memory research,
in particular, will evaluate how next-generation memory architectures,
combined with processing power, provide optimal, energy-efficient
performance for a broad range of DOE applications and other HPC
workloads.
“High-performance computing is a transformative technology that will
allow current and future generations of scientists and engineers to
develop breakthrough advancements to address our most pressing societal
issues.” said David Patterson, president of Intel Federal LLC. “This is
a great example of how public-private partnerships will significantly
help move high performance computing forward and push the boundaries of
innovation.”
Intel aims to achieve Exascale-level computation by the end of the
decade, and has made significant investments in areas that will increase
its capabilities. These include development of new generations of Intel
Xeon processors with entirely new Intel® Many Integrated Core
architecture based Intel Xeon Phi co-processors. In addition, Intel’s
recent acquisitions of Infiniband and interconnect assets from QLogic
and Cray will help dramatically increase the speed of data delivered on
Exascale-class platforms.
"The Exascale level of performance will open new predictive scientific
simulation possibilities that will impact the lives of every human
being. From long term weather forecasting and developing drugs for the
most severe diseases to analyzing new ways to use energy efficiently,
science and engineering researchers need much more compute capacity than
is available today in Petascale systems. The challenge is to deliver
1,000 times the performance of today's Petascale computers with only a
fraction more of the system’s energy consumption and space requirements.
Exascale systems are critical for achieving the Department’s goals - to
ensure national security and promote scientific advancements.” – said
Dr. William J. Harrod, Division Director of Research in the DOE Office
of Science's Advanced Scientific Computing Research. “The primary
objective of the Department's FastForward effort is to begin the long
term R&D necessary to impact systems at the end of the decade. The
development of entirely new high performance, energy-efficient processor
and memory technologies are essential for developing Exascale systems
and Intel is initiating highly innovative designs for these components."
“Within the next five to ten years, we anticipate that our partnerships
with Intel and others in the FastForward program will produce
breakthroughs that will have profound impacts for the HPC community.” –
said Thuc Hoang, National Nuclear Security Administration’s Office of
Advanced Simulation and Computing.
About Intel
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is a world leader in computing innovation. The
company designs and builds the essential technologies that serve as the
foundation for the world’s computing devices. Additional information
about Intel is available at newsroom.intel.com
and blogs.intel.com.
Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the
United States and other countries.
* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
