RHIC Computing Facility Crosses the 1 PB Mark 51
Martin writes "Brookhaven National Lab's RHIC
Computing Facility (RCF) announced yesterday that the amount of data from the physics experiments at the Relativistic Heavy Ion
Collider (RHIC) crossed the 1 PetaByte mark. A mail
that was sent around to the RCF users contained a GUI screen shot (which is removed from the mail archive) that showed the number of MegaBytes transferred as 1,000,400,143. The RCF web pages have some pictures of the tape silos that hold the data.
RHIC and the experiments have been discussed on ./ a few times, look here,
here,
and here."
I think that they can handle a few slashdotters. (Score:1)
Re:I think that they can handle a few slashdotters (Score:2)
Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:4, Informative)
A petabyte is a measure of memory or storage capacity and is 2 to the 50th power bytes or, in decimal, approximately a thousand terabytes.
A terabyte is a measure of computer storage capacity and is 2 to the 40th power or approximately a thousand billion bytes (that is, a thousand gigabytes).
A gigabyte is a measure of computer data storage capacity and is "roughly" a billion bytes. A gigabyte is two to the 30th power, or 1,073,741,824 in decimal notation.
What's bigger?
An exabyte (EB) is a large unit of computer data storage, two to the sixtieth power bytes. The prefix exa means one billion billion, or one quintillion, which is a decimal term. Two to the sixtieth power is actually 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes in decimal, or somewhat over a quintillion (or ten to the eighteenth power) bytes. It is common to say that an exabyte is approximately one quintillion bytes. In decimal terms, an exabyte is a billion gigabytes.
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:1)
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, I think that defining a kilobyte as 1024 bytes is only useful very little of the time. In general it is less convenient than displaying units in terms of the number system that we have been taught to use
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:1)
The best example of a program that does well in this regard is Mathematica. It allows me to implement a wide variety of algorithms involving a wide variety of mathematical objec
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:1)
I also think people should remember that 10^6 bytes is just close to a megabyte. No need to alter the definitions. Most of the times, you just need approximations anyway. When you need the exact amount of bytes (like, when you want to say: I passed a PB!) you do the
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:1)
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:4, Interesting)
It's eminently doable. That's 75,000 particles (atoms or molecules, depending on the species used) per bit--a huge number, still.
The problem comes in storage and readout. If I have to flip bits manually using a scanning electron microscope, that's no good.
On the other hand, let's assume that the work can be done optically, using a scanning laser. Take something the size of a vitamin E molecule; it absorbs visible light readily. Lying flat on a substrate, it would have a surface area (*very* roughly) of about 75 square angstroms. 75,000 of those would cover an area of about five million square angstroms. If arrayed over a square, that's about 240 nanometers on a side, or the diffraction limited spot size of a 480 nm wavelength laser.
Yep, it could be done. A monomolecular layer on a flat substrate; about half a kilogram of molecule. Perfect--a petabyte for your laptop! But--that would cover a total square area of six or so square kilometers...somewhat awkward to scan with a single laser, and a bit clumsy to carry.
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:2)
I imagine that the thin coating of iron oxide on the platter of a hard drive actually represents orders of magnitude less material than 5.6 oz.
I think we may have already acheived and surpassed this kind of information density. Does anybody know how much mass is represented by the
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:3, Interesting)
Off the top of my head, I don't know the mass of the media layer on a hard drive, but it's easy enough to find the areal density of the data.
IBM's 'pixie dust' [ibm.com] (AFC) technology promises densities of up to about 100 billion bits per square inch. That's (roughly) 1000 square angstroms per bit. In other words, about an order of magnitude mo
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:1)
Bits per cubic centimeter is a perfectly good measurement for things like this (it works for current HDs as well, but even a 300GB HD right now only has a density of 2.07 * 10^10 b/cc [heh, "only"]).
BTW, I was hoping this was referring to IBM's current R&D project that was in SciAm around the beginning of last year (nanodrives) -
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:2)
Next is the Exabyte. Whats after that?
I'm also curious why they use tapes and not just rows and rows of cheap IDE disks. Each IDE carrying 250GB at $250 will cost em $1 million plus taxes, shipping, backplane etc, and of course one full-time guy to constantly replace the failed disks with ne
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:3, Informative)
And this is why they don't. Tape is vastly more reliable than HDs are, particularly when you're talking about this much data. As long as you don't need realtime (or even near realtime) access to the data then tape is the better choice. Even with that much data a robotic tape server can serve you the data from any one tape with only a few seconds of access time plus however long it takes to spool the tape. Probably under 5 minutes for an
Re:Just how big is a petabyte... (Score:1, Informative)
in the health care industry (Score:2)
Weeee (Score:5, Funny)
Tomorrow's story:
"RHIC Computing Facility Slashdotted, Crosses the 2 PB Mark." Some will complain of dupes, others will say RTFA.
Re:Weeee (Score:2)
The obvious: (Score:3, Funny)
That's a lot of copies of MyDoom!!!!!!
With apologies....I'll STFU now.
Interresting take from my co-worker (Score:4, Funny)
Time to FIGHT! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Time to FIGHT! (Score:1)
cragen
"Mail" is a mass noun (Score:2, Informative)
"A mail was sent around" is just as grammatically incorrect as "She ate a rice" or "That boy has a courage". The poster should have written "Mail was sent around" or "A message was sent around".
Re:"Mail" is a mass noun (Score:2)
"A mail sent to RCF users contained..."
and been much more consise and spiffy.
Eschew surplusage!
Image link (Score:2, Informative)
Mention it not! (Score:2)
It's nothing compared to the Great Hyperlobic Omni-Cognate Neutron Wrangler of Ciceronicus Twelve.
My first spelling flame on /. (Score:1)
the experiments have been discussed on
Maybe we're supposed to read it backwards to reveal a secret message, like "Taco is Dead" or something?
screen shot *is* available in the archive (Score:2, Informative)
Nice Racks. (Score:2)
Compression (Score:2, Funny)
Waste of tax dollars!!! (Score:1)
Re:Waste of tax dollars!!! (Score:1)
Big Deal (Score:3, Funny)
Old TV screens (Score:2)
Re:Old TV screens (Score:1)
Wow... (Score:2)
If you look at the third picture...isnt that an orgasmatron?