NVIDIA, Forschungszentrum Jülich Launch "NVIDIA Application Lab" at Jülich Supercomputing Centre to Advance Research in Neuroscience, Astrophysics, Other Fields
HAMBURG, GERMANY, Jun 19, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) --ISC'12 -- NVIDIA today announced that its GPUs will be used by
scientists at Germany's Forschungszentrum Juelich, which hosts the
Juelich Supercomputing Centre, one of Europe's largest and most
powerful supercomputing resources, to accelerate advanced
neurological research targeted at unlocking secrets of the human
brain.
NVIDIA also announced a new, multiyear collaboration with the center
to drive the next generation of GPU-accelerated scientific research
in neuroscience and a range of other fields, including astronomy,
astrophysics, material science, particle physics, and protein
folding. Together the two organizations are launching the "NVIDIA
Application Lab," a jointly run and staffed resource for the European
scientific community located at the center's facilities in Juelich.
The lab will enable scientists across Europe to take advantage of
GPU-accelerated supercomputing by providing optimized scientific
applications and technical support.
"Juelich is one of the most influential supercomputing facilities in
Europe, with an impressive track record of solving some of the most
challenging scientific problems," said Steve Scott, chief technology
officer of the Tesla business at NVIDIA. "The new application lab
focused on the breakthrough advantages of GPUs will further enhance
their position as one of the world's foremost institutions driving
the next wave of scientific discovery."
Advanced Brain Research at Juelich
Neuroscience is among the most
exciting and increasingly important research focus areas at
Forschungszentrum Juelich. The center is undertaking a new approach
to advanced neuroscience research, and potentially uncovering the
causes and treatments for autism, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's,
and other debilitating neurological diseases.
Researchers from the Juelich Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine
(INM-1, Structural and Functional Organization of the Human Brain),
also at Forschungszentrum Juelich, are using NVIDIA(R) Tesla(R) GPUs
to accelerate by as much as 50x the reconstruction of histological
brain sections necessary for the rendering of a high-definition,
structurally accurate and realistic model of the human brain. Once
fully developed, the model will give researchers a previously
unattainable level of visibility into brain architecture, function
and interconnections with levels of detail never before available to
neuroscientists.
To create this model, researchers at the institute INM-1 are
reconstructing a vast collection of data sets including images of
histological sections (microscopic tissue structure), magnetic
resonance images and images from an advanced 3D polarized light
imaging (3D-PLI) technique developed at INM-1. 3D-PLI provides, for
each voxel of the brain, information about the direction and the
inclination of fiber tracts. To trace the tracts over long distances,
tractography algorithms are applied, which also require
high-performance GPUs.
"3D-PLI is the only way to achieve highly detailed images of nerve
fibers in adult human brains, but reconstructing and rendering them
in real time into the world's first micro-atlas of the human brain
poses a major computational problem," said Professor Katrin Amunts,
director of INM-1. "Imagine the billions of nerve cells inside the
human brain, connected via fibers. This gives you a sense of the
complexity and intricacy needed to accurately model the network
within the human brain."
Juelich hopes to leverage key learnings from its neuroscience
research to serve as a blueprint for the NVIDIA Application Lab to
enable other advanced GPU-accelerated research projects across a
range of scientific fields.
Enabling Hundreds of European Scientists - New NVIDIA Application
Lab
Beginning later this month, the NVIDIA Application Lab will focus
on enabling hundreds of scientists across Europe, including members
of the PRACE high performance computing organization, to take
advantage of GPU-accelerated systems at the Juelich Supercomputing
Centre by providing optimized scientific applications and technical
support.
"The new lab will streamline the process of setting up and optimizing
new and existing scientific applications to take advantage of GPU
acceleration," said Professor Thomas Lippert, director of the Juelich
Supercomputing Centre. "This agreement will enable hundreds of
researchers to more easily access the game-changing power of GPU
computing to advance all types of research."
Researchers in and outside of Juelich are using Juelich's
GPU-accelerated supercomputers, including the 206-node Juelich
Dedicated GPU Environment (JuDGE) system equipped with NVIDIA Tesla
GPUs, which delivers approximately 240 teraflops of peak performance.
About the Juelich Supercomputing Centre
The Juelich Supercomputing
Centre operates supercomputers of the highest performance class in
Europe. It enables scientists and engineers to solve highly
challenging and complex problems in science and engineering in
collaborative infrastructures by means of supercomputing and grid
technologies. More information is available at the Juelich
Supercomputing Centre website.
About NVIDIA Tesla GPUs
NVIDIA Tesla GPUs are massively parallel
accelerators based on the NVIDIA CUDA(R) parallel computing platform.
Tesla GPUs are designed from the ground up for power-efficient, high
performance computing, computational science and supercomputing,
delivering dramatically higher application acceleration for a range
of scientific and commercial applications than a CPU-only approach.
More information about NVIDIA Tesla GPUs is available at the Tesla
website. To learn more about CUDA or download the latest version,
visit the CUDA website. More NVIDIA news, company and product
information, videos, images and other information is available at the
NVIDIA newsroom. You can also follow us on Twitter (@NVIDIATesla).
About NVIDIA
NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) awakened the world to computer
graphics when it invented the GPU in 1999. Today, its processors
power a broad range of products from smartphones to supercomputers.
NVIDIA's mobile processors are used in cell phones, tablets and auto
infotainment systems. PC gamers rely on GPUs to enjoy spectacularly
immersive worlds. Professionals use them to create 3D graphics and
visual effects in movies and to design everything from golf clubs to
jumbo jets. And researchers utilize GPUs to advance the frontiers of
science with high performance computing. The company has more than
5,000 patents issued, allowed or filed, including ones covering ideas
essential to modern computing. For more information, see
www.nvidia.com.
Certain statements in this press release including, but not limited
to statements as to: the benefits and impact of NVIDIA Tesla GPUs;
and the effects of the company's patents on modern computing are
forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and
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loss of performance of our products or technologies when integrated
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the reports NVIDIA files with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
or SEC, including its Form 10-Q for the fiscal period ended April 29,
2012. Copies of reports filed with the SEC are posted on the
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forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance
and speak only as of the date hereof, and, except as required by law,
NVIDIA disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking
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Copyright 2012 NVIDIA Corporation. All rights reserved. NVIDIA, the
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SOURCE: NVIDIA