The Future of Physics
Oct. 13th, 2006 08:04 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Of some interest:
I was listening to some of the Lattice QCD guys today at work. They've been having some problems, since Lattice QCD has some problems that are ridiculously computationally intensive (think in terms of hundreds of years on a regular computer). To do them, they need computer clusters that can do a large number of brute-force calculations in a second. Such processors are not commonly available as CPUs, but they do exist, and the cluster they've built uses common, commericially available components.
The next generation cluster may run entirely on PlayStation 3s.
There are days when I love physics.
I was listening to some of the Lattice QCD guys today at work. They've been having some problems, since Lattice QCD has some problems that are ridiculously computationally intensive (think in terms of hundreds of years on a regular computer). To do them, they need computer clusters that can do a large number of brute-force calculations in a second. Such processors are not commonly available as CPUs, but they do exist, and the cluster they've built uses common, commericially available components.
The next generation cluster may run entirely on PlayStation 3s.
There are days when I love physics.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-14 04:08 am (UTC)It would be pretty damn expensive, though.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-14 04:34 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-14 05:55 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-14 02:35 pm (UTC)Out of curiosity, what sort of calculations are they doing? Is it very complex math, or do they just need to simulate a large number of particles interacting all at once?
(no subject)
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