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Franklin, NERSC's Cray XT4, is among the largest machines on the list of Top 500 supercomputers in the world.
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Now ComputingA small sample of massively parallel scientific computing jobs running right now at NERSC. Computational Nanoscience for Energy Conversion
Contour plots from Density Functional Theory calculations showing electronic density of states in a model highly mismatched alloy created by adding varying amounts of oxygen (3.125% in (a) and 6.25% in (b)) to a zinc (light blue) selenide (orange) compound. Oxygen atoms are surrounded by the dark-blue high density region. Computations performed on Franklin have showed that introduction of oxygen impurities into a unique class of semiconductors known as "highly mismatched alloys" (HMAs) can substantially enhance the thermoelectric performance of these materials without the customary degradation in electric conductivity. Thermoelectric materials involve direct conversion of temperature differences into electric voltage. In a paper published recently in Physical Review Letters, the researchers suggest that their results could allow a variety of abundant materials and new physics for scalable, widely tunable, high-thermopower thermoelectrics. [ MORE...] |
News CenterTake the NERSC Computer Security TutorialA new Cyber Security Tutorial is available. Users can help to keep NERSC more secure by understanding cyber security risks and taking precautions against them. Hopper Phase 2 will be a Cray XE6 with a Gemini interconnectThe Gemini interconnect will improve performance of scientific applications as well as system reliability and resilience. You can see the Hopper Phase 2 cabinet covers. Hadoop Available on the Magellan CloudThe Hadoop environment is now available on Magellan. See Using Magellan. Science News
NERSC Users Peer into JupiterUC Berkeley researchers Burkhard Militzer and Hugh Wilson explain in a recent issue of Phys. Rev. Letters why there is a scarcity of neon in the outer layers of the planet Jupiter. According to density functional theory molecular dynamics computations carried out on Franklin, helium on Jupiter condenses into droplets and falls like rain. Neon dissolves in the helium raindrops and falls towards the deeper interior. The researchers' prediction will help refine models of Jupiter's interior and the interiors of other planets. [MORE] |
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