About CISL
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Bluevista, CISL's newest supercomputer, will nearly double the number of computational cycles available to researchers, providing as much processing power as Bluesky with just over half the processors. |
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CISL's mission is to support and advance the geosciences with world-class computing, data management and research in mathematics and computational science. CISL realizes this mission by
providing:
- High-performance computing and expertise needed for the development
and execution of large, long-running numerical simulations
- A data archiving and management system that is balanced in performance
and capacity relative to computational resources
- High-speed network and data communication capabilities that are balanced
with respect to computational facilities, storage facilities, and the
requirements of a national and international community
- Research datasets and expertise needed by atmospheric and related
sciences
- A computing environment and support services that emphasize user productivity
and cost-effectiveness
- Education and training in computing and related technologies with
an emphasis on under-represented groups
- Transfer of appropriate NCAR technology to the private sector in collaboration
with the UCAR Foundation
- A center of activity for the mathematical and geophysical communities that applies mathematics to fundamental issues in the geosciences
40 years of operational expertise
NCAR has provided computing resources and services to the atmospheric
science research community since its inception in 1960. The NCAR Computing
Facility was formally organized in 1964 and became the Scientific Computing
Division (SCD) in 1980.
Applied Mathematics Research
In 2005, the Computational & Information Systems Laboratory was formed which now contains SCD and the Institute for Mathematics Applied to Geosciences (IMAGe). IMAGe is an exciting effort to encourage the development of new mathematical tools and models and facilitates connections between the mathematical and geophysical communities. The creation of IMAGe brings new breadth to an already full CISL portfolio of IT and computer science research projects.
Supercomputers, data storage, and networking
Today, CISL manages and operates:
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Mass Storage System |
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Supercomputers – technical and commodity supercomputers with an aggregate capacity
of over 12 teraflops peak and an average of 600 gigaflops sustained
on simulations in production, with about 3% of that capacity dedicated
to data analysis, postprocessing, and scientific visualization
- Mass Storage System – archives and serves over 70 terabytes of
atmospheric and related research data, over 2.1 petabytes of data used
in supercomputing simulations, and a current total capacity of 6 petabytes
- Network – high-speed, reliable, secure network connectivity to five campuses
that requires support of over 150 logical networks, approximately 180
monitored network devices, and more than 4,700 network-attached devices,
plus management commitments to additional municipal and wide-area networks
- Computing Center – a sophisticated
computing center that houses our supercomputers and enterprise servers, with a professional
operations staff who provide support 24 hours a day, 365 days per year
Quick response to problems is ensured by continual monitoring of all
systems and a formal protocol for monitoring, diagnosing, and reporting
problems. Low-level situations are handled by SCD computer specialists, while higher-priority
situations are immediately called or paged in to designated hardware,
software, or network engineers from SCD or the appropriate vendor. A trouble-ticket
system logs and tracks all reports, providing an efficient process for
problem escalation and solution.
Serving user communities
CISL offers services and support to over 1,000 users
at more than 200 sites. The division supplies computing resources to two
communities of researchers,
- Community Computing Facility – provides high-performance computing
to support the NCAR scientific program and meet the needs of university
researchers in atmospheric and related sciences
- Climate
Simulation Laboratory (CSL) – a multiagency
facility established in 1995, CSL provides high-performance computing, data
storage, and data analysis systems to support coupled climate models and
large ensembles of climate prediction models.
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