NSF provides additional funding for Blue Waters project

The National Science Foundation has awarded additional funding of $775,000 for the Blue Waters project, which will field the world's most powerful supercomputer for open scientific research at NCSA in 2011. This additional funding will support efforts to educate scientists and engineers about petascale computing and Blue Waters and to enable them to take full advantage of the extraordinary power of this sustained-petaflops system.

The supplemental funding from NSF will support:

  • The Shodor Foundation in expanding and diversifying the pool of applicants for internships as part of the Undergraduate Petascale Education Program. As part of this effort, a three-week introductory institute about petascale tools, methods, and applications for conducing science and engineering will jump-start the participants' year-long internships.
  • The University of Chicago in increasing the quantity and quality of proposals for Petascale Computing Resource Allocations (PRAC). The PRAC grants from the National Science Foundation enable research teams to work closely with the Blue Waters team in preparing their project for a petascale allocation on the system. In order to receive an award of time on Blue Waters through the National Science Foundation allocation program, teams must be awarded a PRAC pre-allocation.
  • The Performance Modeling & Characterization Lab at the San Diego Supercomputer Center in creating performance models that will provide forecasts of how various science and engineering applications will perform on Blue Waters. The application models will be used for application and system tuning and to help researchers achieve the best possible performance on Blue Waters. A group at Los Alamos National Laboratory led by Adolfy Hoisie also is conducting performance modeling for the project.

For more information on Blue Waters, see: http://www.ncsa.illinois.edu/BlueWaters/.