quantum computing - RISC2 Project https://www.risc2-project.eu Thu, 16 Mar 2023 08:23:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 RISC2 webinar series aims to benefit HPC research and industry in Europe and Latin America https://www.risc2-project.eu/2023/01/26/risc2-webinar-season-is-back-for-season-2/ Thu, 26 Jan 2023 13:32:50 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2657 After the success of the first 4 webinars, the RISC2 Webinar Series “HPC System & Tools” is back for its 2nd season. The webinars will be happening until May 2023, starting on February 22. In each webinar, it will be presented the state-of-the-art in methods and tools for setting-up and maintaining HPC hardware and software infrastructures. […]

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After the success of the first 4 webinars, the RISC2 Webinar Series “HPC System & Tools” is back for its 2nd season. The webinars will be happening until May 2023, starting on February 22.

In each webinar, it will be presented the state-of-the-art in methods and tools for setting-up and maintaining HPC hardware and software infrastructures. The duration of each talk will be around 30-40 minutes, followed by a 10–15-minute moderated discussion with the audience.

There are already 4 webinars scheduled:

 

 

 

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Webinar: A roadmap to quantum computing integration into HPC infrastructures https://www.risc2-project.eu/events/webinar-6-a-roadmap-to-quantum-computing-integration-into-hpc-infrastructures/ Tue, 24 Jan 2023 10:51:44 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?post_type=mec-events&p=2664 Date: March 15, 2023 | 4 p.m. (UTC) Speaker: Alba Cervera Lierta, Barcelona Supercomputing Center Quantum Computers are computational devices composed by a hardware piece that follows the laws of quantum mechanics, other equipment (electronics, cryogenics, photonics, …) that controls the quantum hardware and a software stack that connects all pieces and allows us to program and […]

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Date: March 15, 2023 | 4 p.m. (UTC)

Speaker: Alba Cervera Lierta, Barcelona Supercomputing Center

Quantum Computers are computational devices composed by a hardware piece that follows the laws of quantum mechanics, other equipment (electronics, cryogenics, photonics, …) that controls the quantum hardware and a software stack that connects all pieces and allows us to program and utilize the quantum chip. The quantum processing units (QPU) that are at the core of quantum computers are treated as computational accelerators suitable to tackle particular problems out of range for standard HPC systems. However, current QPU are still prototypes prone to errors. As technology improves, several algorithmic proposals emerge that combine traditional HPC requirements with quantum computation. For that to happen, we need to properly integrate the QPUs into the HPC infrastructures. In this talk, I will address the state of the art in quantum-HPC integration and review the basic requirements, challenges and opportunities of this hybrid computational approach.

About the speaker:

Alba Cervera-Lierta is a Senior Researcher at the Barcelona Supercomputing Center. She earned her PhD in 2019 at the University of Barcelona, where she studied her physics degree and a Msc in particle physics. After her PhD, she moved to the University of Toronto as a postdoctoral fellow at the Alán Aspuru-Guizik group. She works on near-term quantum algorithms and their applications, high-dimensional quantum computation, and artificial intelligence strategies in quantum physics. Since October of 2021, she is the coordinator of the Quantum Spain project, an initiative to boost the quantum computing ecosystem that will acquire and operate a quantum computer at the BSC-CNS. She is also the quantum technical coordinator of EuroQCS-Spain project, one of the six selected projects from EuroHPC-JU to host a European Quantum computer and integrate it into the supercomputing infrastructure.

Registrations are closed.

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JUPITER Ascending – First European Exascale Supercomputer Coming to Jülich https://www.risc2-project.eu/2023/01/02/jupiter-ascending-first-european-exascale-supercomputer-coming-to-julich/ Mon, 02 Jan 2023 12:14:22 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2637 It was finally decided in 2022: Forschungszentrum Jülich will be home to Europe’s first exascale computer. The supercomputer is set to be the first in Europe to surpass the threshold of one trillion (“1” followed by 18 zeros) calculations per second. The system will be acquired by the European supercomputing initiative EuroHPC JU. The exascale computer […]

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It was finally decided in 2022: Forschungszentrum Jülich will be home to Europe’s first exascale computer. The supercomputer is set to be the first in Europe to surpass the threshold of one trillion (“1” followed by 18 zeros) calculations per second. The system will be acquired by the European supercomputing initiative EuroHPC JU. The exascale computer should help to solve important and urgent scientific questions regarding, for example, climate change, how to combat pandemics, and sustainable energy production, while also enabling the intensive use of artificial intelligence and the analysis of large data volumes. The overall costs for the system amount to 500 million euros. Of this total, 250 million euros is being provided by EuroHPC JU and a further 250 million euros in equal parts by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia (MKW NRW).

The computer named JUPITER (short for “Joint Undertaking Pioneer for Innovative and Transformative Exascale Research”) will be installed 2023/2024 on the campus of Forschungszentrum Jülich. It is intended that the system will be operated by the Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC), whose supercomputers JUWELS and JURECA currently rank among the most powerful in the world. JSC has participated in the application procedure for a high-end supercomputer as a member of the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS), an association of the three German national supercomputing centres JSC in Jülich, High Performance Computing Stuttgart (HLRS), and Leibniz Computing Centre (LRZ) in Garching. The competition was organized by the European supercomputing initiative EuroHPC JU, which was formed by the European Union together with European countries and private companies. 

JUPITER is now set to become the first European supercomputer to make the leap into the exascale class. In terms of computing power, it will be more powerful that 5 million modern laptops of PCs. Just like Jülich’s current supercomputer JUWELS, JUPITER will be based on a dynamic, modular supercomputing architecture, which Forschungszentrum Jülich developed together with European and international partners in the EU’s DEEP research projects.

In a modular supercomputer, various computing modules are coupled together. This enables program parts of complex simulations to be distributed over several modules, ensuring that the various hardware properties can be optimally utilized in each case. Its modular construction also means that the system is well prepared for integrating future technologies such as quantum computing or neurotrophic modules, which emulate the neural structure of a biological brain.

Figure Modular Supercomputing Architecture: Computing and storage modules of the exascale computer in its basis configuration (blue) as well as optional modules (green) and modules for future technologies (purple) as possible extensions. 

In its basis configuration, JUPITER will have and enormously powerful booster module with highly efficient GPU-based computation accelerators. Massively parallel applications are accelerated by this booster in a similar way to a turbocharger, for example to calculate high-resolution climate models, develop new materials, simulate complex cell processes and energy systems, advanced basic research, or train next-generation, computationally intensive machine-learning algorithms.

One major challenge is the energy that is required for such large computing power. The average power is anticipated to be up to 15 megawatts. JUPITER has been designed as a “green” supercomputer and will be powered by green electricity. The envisaged warm water cooling system should help to ensure that JUPITER achieves the highest efficiency values. At the same time, the cooling technology opens up the possibility of intelligently using the waste heat  that is produced. For example, just like its predecessor system JUWELS, JUPITER will be connected to the new low-temperature network on the Forschungszentrum Jülich campus. Further potential applications for the waste heat from JUPITER are currently being investigated by Forschungszentrum Jülich.

By Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC)

 

The first image is JUWELS: Germany’s fastest supercomputer JUWELS at Forschungszentrum Jülich, which is funded in equal parts by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia (MKW NRW) via the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS). (Copyright: Forschungszentrum Jülich / Sascha Kreklau)

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RISC2 highly represented at CARLA 2022 https://www.risc2-project.eu/2022/10/13/risc2-highly-represented-at-carla-2022/ Thu, 13 Oct 2022 11:26:57 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2481 RISC2 was part of the organization committee of the Latin America High-Performance Computing Conference (CARLA 2022), which took place between September 26 and 30, 2022, in Porto Alegre, Brazil. For the second yea in a row, the RISC2 consortium participated in the organization of different activities and presentations. RISC2 was responsible for the organization of […]

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RISC2 was part of the organization committee of the Latin America High-Performance Computing Conference (CARLA 2022), which took place between September 26 and 30, 2022, in Porto Alegre, Brazil. For the second yea in a row, the RISC2 consortium participated in the organization of different activities and presentations.

RISC2 was responsible for the organization of the “HPC and Data Sciences meet Scientific Computing” workshop, on September 26, which gathered 15 participants. This workshop discussed different topics, such as Scientific Machine Learning, High Performance Scientific Computing, and Data Science. Álvaro Coutinho, Marta Mattoso (from COPPE/Federal University of Rio de Janeiro), Frédéric Valentin (from the National Laboratory for Scientific Computing), Luc Giraud, Stéphane Lanteri, and Patrick Valduriez (from Inria) were the organizers of the workshop.

RISC2 also organized a tutorial about physics-informed neural networks. Our partners from Brazil, Álvaro Coutinho and Romulo Montalvão, from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, António Tadeu Gomes and Frédéric Valentin, from the National Laboratory for Scientific Computing, were the instructors of the session.

Our partners Carlos Barrios, from the Universidad Industrial de Santander, was one of the General Chairs of the Conference. “With 130 participants from all over the world, CARLA 2022 was a space of “rediscover” (to rediscover us) after two years in virtual mode. More than the scientific tracks and the panels, CARLA 2022 allowed us to discuss the challenges and the strengthening of collaboration between the partners (old and new)”, says Carlos Barrios.

Various RISC2 members also gave different presentations. Alba Cervera-Lierta, from the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, was one of the Keynote Speakers of the CARLA Conference, with a presentation about Quantum Computing. Esteban Meneses, from CeNAT, participated in a presentation about “Implementing a GPU-Portable Field-Line Tracing Application with OpenMP Offload”. Pablo Mininni, from the University of Buenos Aires, was responsible for one of the invited talks about “Multi-level parallelisation of computational fluid dynamics codes using CUDA, MPI and OpenMP.”

CARLA is an international conference that provides a forum to foste the growth and strength of the HPC community in Latin America through the exchange and dissemination of new ideas, techniques, and research in HPC and its application areas.

Also during the conference, the RISC2 members had a networking meeting with the SCALAC members, reinforcing the partnership with the SCALAC network.

 

About CARLA 2022:

 

“CARLA 2022 was a space of “rediscover” (to rediscover us) after two years in virtual mode. More than the scientific tracks and the panels, CARLA 2022 allowed us to discuss the challenges and the strengthening of collaboration between the partners (old and new)”.

Carlos Barrios Hernandez,  Universidad Industrial de Santander

 

 

 

 

“Having the RISC2 project supporting a networking dinner in CARLA was crucial in building up the next research collaboration we want to have in the region. I am thoroughly satisfied with the experience of connecting with European and Latin American peers”.

Esteban Meneses, CeNAT

 

 

 

“Among the most important elements, I can highlight the quality and variety of paper presented. This indicates to me that the Latin American HPC community is growing and getting stronger. In addition, I was able to notice efforts to generate relations between Europe and Latin America through the RISC2 project”.

Elvis Rojas Ramírez, CeNAT

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University of Costa Rica (UCR) https://www.risc2-project.eu/2022/04/22/university-of-costa-rica-ucr/ Fri, 22 Apr 2022 09:16:57 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=1888 Title: University of Costa Rica (UCR) System name: University of Costa Rica (UCR) Location: Materials Science and Engineering Research Center (CICIMA) Web OS: Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Country: Costa Rica Processor architecture:  Head nodes (1 node): Intel Xeon, 20 physical cores, 64 GB main memory Computing nodes (14 nodes): Intel Xeon, 20 physical cores, 64 GB […]

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  • Title: University of Costa Rica (UCR)
  • System name: University of Costa Rica (UCR)
  • Location: Materials Science and Engineering Research Center (CICIMA)
  • Web
  • OS: Ubuntu 20.04 LTS
  • Country: Costa Rica
  • Processor architecture: 
    • Head nodes (1 node): Intel Xeon, 20 physical cores, 64 GB main memory
    • Computing nodes (14 nodes): Intel Xeon, 20 physical cores, 64 GB of main memory
    • Storage capacity: 65 TB
  • Access Policy: Restricted to students and staff of the University of Costa Rica
  • Main research domains: Astrophysics, particle physics, nuclear physics, quantum mechanics, molecular dynamics, plasma physics, bioinformatics, criminology
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    RISC2 presented at the Mexican Congress https://www.risc2-project.eu/2021/12/22/risc2-presented-at-the-mexican-congress/ Wed, 22 Dec 2021 15:38:24 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=1526 Mateo Valero Cortés, Director of the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, presented the RISC2 project to the Science, Technology and Innovation Committee of the Mexican Congress. The Science, Technology and Innovation Committee held the forum “Presentation of Global Indices” with the main goal of exchanging ideas about past and present experiences that can lead the world to a […]

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    Mateo Valero Cortés, Director of the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, presented the RISC2 project to the Science, Technology and Innovation Committee of the Mexican Congress.

    The Science, Technology and Innovation Committee held the forum “Presentation of Global Indices” with the main goal of exchanging ideas about past and present experiences that can lead the world to a sustainable, humane and equitable development.

    During his presentation, Mateo Valero Cortés presented the RISC2 project, a network focused on supporting the coordination of High-Performance Computing research between Europe and Latin America. According to Mateo Valero Cortés, RISC2 will contribute to improving collaboration between these regions.

    As a keynote speaker, the director of the Barcelona Supercomputing Center addressed some of the challenges that humanity faces, stressing the importance of research, development and innovation. For example, digital twins, energy production and, and quantum computing, among other topics.

    The director of the Barcelona Supercomputing Center addressed some of the challenges that humanity faces, stressing the importance of research, development and innovation. For example, Mateo Valero Cortés mentioned digital twins, energy production, and quantum computing, among other topics.

     

     

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    RISC2 with a strong presence at CARLA 2021 https://www.risc2-project.eu/2021/10/05/https-www-risc2-project-eu-2021-10-05-risc2-with-a-strong-presence-at-carla-2021/ Tue, 05 Oct 2021 08:20:04 +0000 http://192.168.10.124/risc/?p=1016 The RISC2 project participated at the Latin America High-Performance Computing Conference (CARLA 2021), which took place between September 27 and October 15, 2021, with 888 registered attendees from 25 different countries. The consortium of the RISC2 project participated in the organization of several activities during this international conference, within the scope of the collaboration between […]

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    The RISC2 project participated at the Latin America High-Performance Computing Conference (CARLA 2021), which took place between September 27 and October 15, 2021, with 888 registered attendees from 25 different countries. The consortium of the RISC2 project participated in the organization of several activities during this international conference, within the scope of the collaboration between Europe and Latin America communities, working on HPC-related topics.

    CARLA is an international conference aimed at providing a forum to foster the growth and strength of the High-Performance Computing (HPC) community in Latin America through the exchange and dissemination of new ideas, techniques, and research in HPC and its applications areas. The general chair of the 2021 edition is Isidoro Gitler, from Cinvestav, who coordinates and participates in all the event’s activities.

    Workshops

    Different partners of the RISC2 were involved in the organization of the scientific workshops as part of the CARLA 2021 conference. Between seven workshops organized to this conference, two of them are from the RISC2 consortium. The workshop on HPC Collaboration between Europe and Latin America took place online, on October 5, 2021. The goal was to provide a space dedicated to exchange experiences, towards the promotion and support of new collaborations across different countries of Europe and Latin America, within the framework of the recently launched ‘A network for supporting the coordination of High-Performance Computing research between Europe and Latin America’ (RISC2). This workshop achieved a maximum number of 55 participants, with Pedro Vieira Alberto, from the University of Coimbra, as one of the Invited Speakers. Ulisses Cortés, from Barcelona Supercomputing Center, presented the RISC2 project, as an example of HPC collaboration between Europe and Latin America. The chairs of this event were Ulisses Cortés and Rafael Mayo-García, from CIEMAT.

    Another workshop organized by the RISC2 team was the workshop on HPC an Energy, which was held online on October 4, with Álvaro Coutinho, from COPPE, as Chair. This workshop focused on HPC techniques applied to the energy sector, in order to improve and reform many industrial sectors. HPC can provide several solutions to the energy sector, e.g., oil and gas solutions in upstream, midstream, and downstream problems; improve wind energy performance; solve issues of combustion efficiency for transportation systems; making nuclear systems more efficient and safer; improving solar energy systems; optimizing wind energy systems; improving the quality and efficiency of seismic and geophysical simulations, etc.

    It is important to mention that Ginés Guerrero, from NLHPC, was one of the chairs of workshops organized by CARLA 2021.

    Tutorials

    Carla Osthoff, from Laboratório Nacional de Computação Científica, was Tutorial Chair Member of the 11 tutorials that were accepted at the CARLA 2021. CARLA 2021 provided tutorials and hands-on workshops for both introductory and advanced levels, specifically designed to undergraduate and master students all over Latin- American countries. There were two different periods: Fundamental Tutorials, which included six different tutorials the week before CARLA 2021, and Advanced Tutorials, with five different tutorials held a week after CARLA 2021. CARLA 2021 Tutorials were supported by Latin American, Caribbean, and European institutions.
    Esteban Mosckos, from the Universidad de Buenos Aires, was involved in the organization of two different tutorials: “OpenMP: Introduction to shared memory models” and “Introduction to Distributed Memory Models using MPI”. Both activities consisted of theory and hands-on exercises, lasting four hours, with close to 40 assistants each.

    The NLHPC partner was also responsible for a tutorial focused on Working with a resource manager on an HPC infrastructure, for the use of SLURM. Two more tutorials were organized by NLHPC, including, the tutorial on Performance Analysis Tools, with the participation of one of the members of the NLHPC Scientific Committee, and the other on Quantum Computing, with the participation of IBM.

    The CARLA 2021 conference had more than 30 institutions on the board committee and more than 115 in attendance, connected simultaneously.

    All the videos are available here.

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