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Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Eliminating Errors in Quantum Computing

Friday, January 13th, 2012

Quantum computers, should they be realized one day, will inevitably make errors. Therefore, they need special error correcting mechanisms. The most important part of it, a so-called Toffoli gate, has now been realized by ETH scientists with superconducting circuits.

Photograph of the superconducting 3-qubit-processor mounted on and connected to a high frequency printed circuit board. (Image: Quantum Device Lab, ETH Zurich)

In a classical computer there happens one error in about ten quadrillion (1016) operations. The goal in quantum computing is to have less than one error in 10.000 (104) operations. Lars Steffen, PhD student in Wallraff´s group and co-author of the publication says that this is a reasonable goal, since errors in quantum computation can never be avoided. «If you want to do complicated quantum information processing, these errors need to be corrected», Andreas Wallraff said.

ETH-professor Andreas Wallraff and his team could now realize a Toffoli gate using a chip with superconducting circuits and could verify its functionality with the newest methods. The results of the study were now published in «Nature».

Read the full article on the CSCS web pages »

Article on Flash Informatique at EPFL about Free Software for HPC

Monday, December 19th, 2011

In the last number of “Flash Informatique” at EPFL you can read an article by Vittoria Rezzonico about free software for HPC.

Since the Beowulf revolution, High Performance Computing (HPC) has been taken over not only by clusters built from commodity hardware, but also by free software. Starting from the operating system, up to the specific scientific software, supercomputers (even the most powerful in the world) sport all kind of free software.

Operating systems in the Top500

Operating systems in the Top500

Read the article (in French) »

You may also be interested in reading an interview with George Lake, who was working in the research group that created the first beowulf cluster.

Interview with John Feo, Pacific Northwest Lab about the usage of the Cray XMT

Friday, December 2nd, 2011

John Feo is the director of the Center for Adaptive Supercomputer Software (CASS) at the Pacific Northwest Laboratory. John and his team are using a Cray XMT 1 supercomputer since three years to study a large spectrum of applications like graphs algorithms, Dynamic network analysis (DNA), Emerging Subnetwork Patterns, bioinformatics, semantic search, and semantic database development.

The CASS group is also developing compilers and runtime systems to improve the compilation of code and is working on new programming models for highly multithreated machines like the XMT.

For John one important application of  the Cray XMT will be in companies like Facebook, Google, or banks doing graphs algorithms, semantic search and knowledge discovery on huge data sets.

In this interview John explains the particularities of developing applications for this new kind of architectures and how his team is supporting users and scientists in porting their code.

hpc-ch Forum on GPU – Video on Cray XK6 Overview

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

Nicola Bianchi (CSCS) presents the last supercomputer arrival at CSCS: The Cray XK6 supercomputer which is a trifecta of scalar, network and many-core innovation. It combines Cray´s proven Gemini interconnect, AMD’s leading multi-core scalar processors and NVIDIA´s powerful many-core GPU processors to create a true, productive hybrid supercomputer.

Download the slides of the presentation (PDF) »

hpc-ch Forum on GPU – Video on GPU Use at the University of Basel

Monday, November 21st, 2011

In October hpc-ch organized together with the University of Basel a Forum on the Use of GPU and Accelerators for HPC. In a series of articles we publish the videos of the presentations.

Martin Jacquot (Universitiy of Basel) was hosting the event and presented the implementation and usage of GPU at the University of Basel.

Download the slides of the presentation (PDF) »