DiRAC-3 Operations 2019-2022 - Edinburgh
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Physics and Astronomy
Abstract
Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.
Planned Impact
The DiRAC-3 Facility strategy for impact and innovation delivery is well-aligned with the UK government Industrial Strategy. As such, much of our societal and economic impact will continue to be driven by our engagements with industry. Each DiRAC-3 service provider has a local industrial strategy to deliver continued high levels of industrial engagement and to explore avenues to increase innovation and industrial returns over the next three years. Progress towards the industrial strategy goals will be monitored by the Service Management Boards and the DiRAC Technical Manager and reported to STFC via the DiRAC Oversight Committee.
The "Pathways to Impact" document attached to the lead JeS form for this proposal describes the overall DiRAC-3 industrial strategy, including our strategic goals and key performance indicators.
Examples of the expected impact of DiRAC-3 include:
Dissemination of best practice in High Performance Computing software engineering throughout the theoretical Particle Physics, Astronomy and Nuclear physics communities in the UK as well as to industry partners.
Training of the next generation of research scientists to tackle problems effectively on state-of-the- art of High Performance Computing facilities. Such skills are much in demand from high-tech industry and the cadre of highly-skilled, computationally literate individuals nurtured by DiRAC-3 will have influence beyond academia and will help to maintain the UK's scientific and economic leadership.
Development and delivery of co-design projects with industry partners to improve future generations of hardware and software.
Development of new techniques in the area of High Performance Data Analytics which will benefit industry partners and researchers in other fields such as biomedicine, biology, engineering, economics and social science, and the natural environment who can use these developments to improve research outcomes in their areas.
Sharing of best practice on the design and operation of distributed HPC facilities with UK National e-Infrastructure partners and providing leadership towards an integrated UKRI National e-Infrastructure. By supporting the uptake of emerging technologies by the DiRAC research communities, we will enable other research communities, both in academia and industry, to explore the value of using leading-edge technology to support their research workflows.
Engagement with the general public to promote interest in science, and to explain how our ability to solve complex problems using the latest computer technology leads to new scientific capabilities/insights. Engagement of this kind also naturally encourages the uptake of STEM subjects in schools.
The "Pathways to Impact" document attached to the lead JeS form for this proposal describes the overall DiRAC-3 industrial strategy, including our strategic goals and key performance indicators.
Examples of the expected impact of DiRAC-3 include:
Dissemination of best practice in High Performance Computing software engineering throughout the theoretical Particle Physics, Astronomy and Nuclear physics communities in the UK as well as to industry partners.
Training of the next generation of research scientists to tackle problems effectively on state-of-the- art of High Performance Computing facilities. Such skills are much in demand from high-tech industry and the cadre of highly-skilled, computationally literate individuals nurtured by DiRAC-3 will have influence beyond academia and will help to maintain the UK's scientific and economic leadership.
Development and delivery of co-design projects with industry partners to improve future generations of hardware and software.
Development of new techniques in the area of High Performance Data Analytics which will benefit industry partners and researchers in other fields such as biomedicine, biology, engineering, economics and social science, and the natural environment who can use these developments to improve research outcomes in their areas.
Sharing of best practice on the design and operation of distributed HPC facilities with UK National e-Infrastructure partners and providing leadership towards an integrated UKRI National e-Infrastructure. By supporting the uptake of emerging technologies by the DiRAC research communities, we will enable other research communities, both in academia and industry, to explore the value of using leading-edge technology to support their research workflows.
Engagement with the general public to promote interest in science, and to explain how our ability to solve complex problems using the latest computer technology leads to new scientific capabilities/insights. Engagement of this kind also naturally encourages the uptake of STEM subjects in schools.
Organisations
Publications
Khachaturyants T
(2022)
Bending waves excited by irregular gas inflow along warps
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Etherington A
(2023)
Beyond the bulge-halo conspiracy? Density profiles of early-type galaxies from extended-source strong lensing
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Hoy C
(2024)
bilby in space: Bayesian inference for transient gravitational-wave signals observed with LISA
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Rowan C
(2024)
Black hole binaries in AGN accretion discs - II. Gas effects on black hole satellite scatterings
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Figueras P
(2022)
Black hole binaries in cubic Horndeski theories
in Physical Review D
Widdicombe J
(2020)
Black hole formation in relativistic Oscillaton collisions
in Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics
Bamber J
(2023)
Black hole merger simulations in wave dark matter environments
in Physical Review D
Talbot R
(2021)
Blandford-Znajek jets in galaxy formation simulations: method and implementation
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Rey M
(2024)
Boosting galactic outflows with enhanced resolution
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Bartlett-Tisdall S
(2024)
Bootstrapping boundary QED. Part I
in Journal of High Energy Physics
Evstafyeva T
(2023)
Boson stars in massless and massive scalar-tensor gravity
in Physical Review D
Hatton D
(2021)
Bottomonium precision tests from full lattice QCD: Hyperfine splitting, ? leptonic width, and b quark contribution to e + e - ? hadrons
in Physical Review D
Debattista V
(2020)
Box/peanut-shaped bulges in action space
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Schirra A
(2021)
Bringing faint active galactic nuclei (AGNs) to light: a view from large-scale cosmological simulations
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Hernández-Aguayo C
(2021)
Building a digital twin of a luminous red galaxy spectroscopic survey: galaxy properties and clustering covariance
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Ziampras A
(2024)
Buoyancy torques prevent low-mass planets from stalling in low-turbulence radiative discs
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Bartlett D
(2021)
Calibrating galaxy formation effects in galactic tests of fundamental physics
in Physical Review D
Christie D
(2022)
CAMEMBERT: A Mini-Neptunes General Circulation Model Intercomparison, Protocol Version 1.0.A CUISINES Model Intercomparison Project
in The Planetary Science Journal
Chen C
(2023)
Can a binary star host three giant circumbinary planets?
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Font A
(2021)
Can cosmological simulations capture the diverse satellite populations of observed Milky Way analogues?
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Threlfall J
(2021)
Can Multi-threaded Flux Tubes in Coronal Arcades Support a Magnetohydrodynamic Avalanche?
in Solar physics
Genina A
(2022)
Can tides explain the low dark matter density in Fornax?
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Carrillo A
(2024)
Can we really pick and choose? Benchmarking various selections of Gaia Enceladus/Sausage stars in observations with simulations
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Hamilton E
(2024)
Catalog of precessing black-hole-binary numerical-relativity simulations
in Physical Review D
Desmond H
(2022)
Catalogues of voids as antihaloes in the local Universe
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters
| Title | Supplemental data for the report "Optimisation of lattice simulations energy efficiency" |
| Description | Supplemental data for the report "Optimisation of lattice simulations energy efficiency". Also available as a git repository. It contains: Full copy of benchmark run directories Power monitoring scripts Power monitoring raw measurements Power monitoring data analysis and results used in the report For a more complete description, please see the README.md file. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2022 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| URL | https://zenodo.org/record/7057645 |
| Title | Supplemental data for the report "Optimisation of lattice simulations energy efficiency" |
| Description | Supplemental data for the report "Optimisation of lattice simulations energy efficiency". Also available as a git repository. It contains: Full copy of benchmark run directories Power monitoring scripts Power monitoring raw measurements Power monitoring data analysis and results used in the report For a more complete description, please see the README.md file. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2022 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| URL | https://zenodo.org/record/7057644 |
