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Interview with Anton Kozhevnikov, Co-Winner of the Gordon Bell Prize Honorable Mention for Special Achievements in Scalability

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

Anton Kozhevnikov is one of the co-winner of the Gordon Bell Prize Honorable Mention for Special Achievements in Scalability at last Supercomputing Conference SC10 in New Orleans (see our previous posting). Anton is a post doc at the Institute for Theoretical Physics at ETH Zurich and is working for the Computational Physics group under the supervision of Prof. Thomas C. Schulthess (ETH Zurich and CSCS).

We asked Anton about his work and the challenges he had.

Q: What is the relevance for physics of your research work?

We are working on first principle parametrization of a Hubbard model. Why do we need this? Hubbard model is very important because it captures the essential properties of strongly correlated systems (for example, Hubbard model can describe a high-temperature superconducting transition). But like any model it has a set of freely adjustable parameters which impact the resulting solution. By doing parametrization of a model from first principles (i.e. calculating material-specific parameters of a model knowing only crystal structure of a given compound) we eliminate the uncertainty in the choice of parameters of the Hubbard model.

I should mention that the underlying theory for the first principle Hubbard model parametrization is well known and accepted in solid state community.  In this work we have demonstrated that this type of calculations can be done in a very fast and efficient way.

Next picture shows the isosurface (transparent red and blue) of the basis functions for the 3-band Hubbard model for prototype high Tc superconductor La2CuO4. Red balls represent copper atoms and blue balls – oxygens. This classical CuO2 plane is responsible for superconductivity in cuprates.

Q: What sustained performance did you reach?

We reached 1.5 petaflops on 221’440 computational cores of Jaguar XT5.

Q: Your received the prize for “special achievments in scalability”. What is so special about your work?

We demonstrated very strong scaling of the code. In all our runs time to solution was very close to ideal scaling ~1/N, where N is the number of cores.

Q: What have been the challenges to get such a high performance?

The DRC (density-reposne code) was redesigned considerably to take advantage of Cray’s linear algebra library (LibSci) and of Cray’s fast interconnect. The main challenge was to finish project in time and end up with fast and reliable code.

Q: How has the work been coordinated between the different partners? (ETH Zurich, ORNL, Tennesse)

The work on response code started two years ago when I was a postdoc at University of Tennessee with professor Adolfo Eguiluz being my adviser. At that time we cared more about background physics and not about performance. Later I joined the group of professor Thomas Schulthess  at ETH Zürich. The development of response code continued here in Switzerland but now we payed more attention to optimization and speed. Thomas Schulthess undertook the general development strategy and coordination of scientific research, Adolfo Eguiluz was on the physics side of our work an I was doing coding, optimization, test and production runs.

Gordon Bell 2010 Prize Honorable Mention for Special Achievements in Scalability to Thomas Schulthess and coworkers

Friday, November 19th, 2010

The Gordon Bell Prize 2010 has been awarded at the Supercomputing Conference SC10 in New Orleans yesterday November 18.

We are very happy to announce that Prof. Thomas Schulthess (ETH Zurich and CSCS), Anton Kozhevnikov (ETH Zurich) and Adolfo G. Eguiluz (University of Tennessee, Knoxville) received the honorable mention for special achievments in scalability for their project:

Toward First Principles Electronic Structure Simulations of Excited States and Strong Correlations in Nano- and Materials Science

Schulthess and his team used for their work the Cray XT5 at Oak Ridge National Laboratory´s Leadership Computing Facility (ORNL).

A special mention is warded to the entry whose performance is short of that of the Peak Performance prize, which nevertheless utilizes innovative techniques to produce new levels of performance on a real application. Such techniques may be, for instance, in mathematical algorithms, data structures, or implementations.

The peak performance: award has been awarded to team led by George Biros is a Gordon Bell Prize finalist at SC10 for their work demonstrating the simulation of blood flow using heterogeneous architectures and programming models at the petascale using CPU and hybrid CPU-GPU platforms, including the new NVIDIA Fermi architecture and 200,000 cores of ORNL’s Jaguar system.

Petascale Direct Numerical Simulation of Blood Flow on 200K Cores and Heterogeneous Architectures

The low price/performance: prize has awarded by a team lead by Tsuyoshi Hamada (Nagasaki University) for

190 TFlops Astrophysical N-body Simulation on a Cluster of GPU

Hamada presented the results of a hierarchical N-body simulation on DEGIMA, a cluster of PCs with 576 graphic processing units (GPUs) and using an InfiniBand interconnect. DEGIMA stands for DEstination for GPU Intensive MAchine, and is located at Nagasaki Advanced Computing Center (NACC), Nagasaki University.They  upgraded DEGIMA’s interconnect using InfiniBand. DEGIMA is composed by 144 nodes with 576 GT200 GPUs.

We would like to thank Vittoria Rezzonico of EPF Lausanne and hpc-ch member for having reported this winners directly from the SC10 conference.

Team with Prof. Schulthess (ORNL, Institute for Theoretical Physics and Swiss National Supercomputing Center) wins a Gordon Bell Prize for the second time in a row

Friday, November 20th, 2009

A team led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s (ORNL’s) Markus Eisenbach and with Prof. Thomas Schulthess was named winner Thursday of the 2009 ACM Gordon Bell Prize, which honors the world’s highest-performing scientific computing applications.

This is the second time in a row that the research team of Prof. Thomas Schulthess wins the prestigious Gordon Bell Prize for supercomputing. The prize has been announced today, November 19 at the SC09 international supercomputing conference in Portland, Oregon.

gordon-bell-prize-jpg

The application developed by ORNL, Florida State University, and the Institute for Theoretical Physics and Swiss National Supercomputing Center achieved 1.84 thousand trillion calculations per second (1.84 petaflops)  using an application that analyzes magnetic systems and, in particular, the effect of temperature on these systems.

Read the official press release on HPCwire »

Paper presented at Supercomputing 2009 »