UC Irvine: Reaching New Frontiers in Physics

Several hundred feet beneath the French-Swiss border lies the world’s largest, most powerful particle accelerator—the Large Hadron Collider. More than 2,200 researchers from around the globe work at the CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) laboratory on ATLAS, a large-scale particle physics experiment that studies the forces that have shaped the universe. To create the high-performance computing clusters that capture and analyze the massive amount of experimental data generated, researchers from the University of California, Irvine, and collaborating institutions selected Dell PowerEdge* servers equipped with Intel® Xeon® processors. Read their story.

Digging Multi-Core Performance

216KB, PDF

Post a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Not yet a subscriber? Join now for free and join the discussion.

Get the Latest

Subscribe now and stay up-to-date! You'll get the latest IT best practices, learn from IT leaders, and receive invitations to local IT-to-IT events. Subscribe now for free.

Already signed up? Log in.

Recent Comments

Discover the Hidden Costs of Keeping Older PCs (1)
Rich Sobchinsky: How come I didn’t get invited to the show in Frisco TX. on 11/3/09 or the Belo Mansion Dallas...
Improving Client Stability with Proactive Problem Management (1)
nickjb: Very good read. Is there an opportunity to discuss the tools/practices Intel is using further?
Raising the ROI Bar (1)
Deepnarayan Choubey: Happy day all ! On the security side , vPro Technology improves network traffic filtering and...
How fast can a PC pay for itself? (3)
Deepnarayan Choubey: Happy day all ! Better Management improved performance and security , and Power savings add up...