Custom Search

Pulling ITER simulations together and formulating control & instrumentattion

Sunday 27th April 2008
EUPHORIA's first training. Courtesy: http://www.euforia-project.eu

Edinburgh was the location for a EUFORIA first training event at the EPCC's training facility. The 3-day course, Message Passing Programming and the MPI library, was designed to give scientists and users a broad understanding of the Message Passing programming model commonly used to run applications on large supercomputers. The course used the de facto standard for message passing, the Message Passing Interface (MPI).

ITER whose first procurement has been for the supply of chromium-plated copper strands for the super conducting magnets, which will hold the plasma in position within the reactor also has to work on computing integration. In October, a meeting will be held in Barcleona to discuss the ITER- CODAC Plant Control Design Handbook and formulate the EU Procurement strategy for ITER Control and Instrumentation.


To test whether nuclear fusion is feasible, plasma turbulence simulation and modelling tools are being developed, but t require a huge amount of computing power to process data.  EUFORIA is the  €3.65m EU-funded project which aims to link computers from all over Europe and harmonise the simulations made in various areas of fusion.

EUFORIA has a remit to provide scientific users with the training required to allow them to successfully exploit the HPC and Grid infrastructures available in the project and is running a number of training events through-out the duration of the project, from short lectures provided over video-conferencing technology, to 1-day workshops, and longer courses. 

Bringing together partners from France, Finland, Germany, Italy Spain, Poland, Slovenia, Sweden and UK, the project will work between now and 2010 to distribute the computing capacity needed for simulating ITER to networks of computers and high performance computers (HPC) across Europe.

'We try to link the different computer architectures such that the strengths of the respective architecture are made use of to the full extent,' stresses Dr Marcus Hardt, EUFORIA project coordinator at the Karlsruhe Research Centre (FZK) in Germany.

Until now, simulation programs from various fields of physics have been conducted separately. These individual simulation program frequently involves extensive calculation processes, taking months before results are available. The EUFORIA project hopes to bring these programs together to simulate the fusion reactor as a whole.

Initially, the project will focus on adapting and optimising plasma physics and magnetic confinement fusion codes for use in grid and HPC environments. The aim is to make the programs containing the code run faster and to enable them to use a larger number of processors in order to solve substantially larger problem instances.

The lessons learned during this development phase will be made publicly available and direct support will be provided to new users who wish to integrate their fusion codes into the EUFORIA platform. This activity alone will provide a significant step forward in the modelling capacities and capabilities of the fusion modelling community, say the project partners. The coupling of different computational modules and codes requires a large degree of coordination and structured data management and efficient resource scheduling.

In its second phase, the project will develop a workflow orchestration tool to facilitate the integration process and provide a structure or framework for performing additional tasks such as computational steering and interactive monitoring or control. The end result, the project partners hope, is improved integrated modelling capabilities of fusion plasmas, as well as new fusion computing infrastructure and tools.

Source: http://www.euforia-project.eu
http://www.iter.org
http://fusionforenergy.europa.eu/
http://computescotland.com//iter-launches-first-ever-procurement-1112.php

Scotland, Computer News in Scotland, Technology News in Scotland, Computing in Scotland, Web news in Scotland computers, Internet, Communications, advances in communications, communications in Scotland, Energy, Scottish energy, Materials, Biomedicine, Biomedicine in Scotland, articles in Biomedicine, Scottish business, business news in Scotland.

Website : beachshore