Software Telescope 62
An anonymous reader writes "The BBC News is running the story 'Pyramid power' probes universe which is about LOFAR's software telescope for radio astronomy. The heart of the system is a IBM Blue Gene which processes data from an array of simple pyramidal radio antennae. The array of antennae are also multitasking in the fields of geophysics and agriculture."
Why can't we distribute this work? (Score:5, Interesting)
If you participate, you get free access to all the high res graphics!
Re:Why can't we distribute this work? (Score:5, Funny)
And if you help out with the potato farm project, can you get an order of fries with that?
Re:Why can't we distribute this work? (Score:5, Informative)
The bandwidth of the connection between each Remote Stations and the Central Processing Systems will be ~10 Gbit/s, of which ~ 2.5 Gbit/s will be occupied by the sustained datarate resulting from the sensors.
LOFAR produces very large data streams, especially for the astronomy application (e.g. 6 TB of raw visibility data for an 8 beam, 4 hour synthesis observation, after integration for 1 sec and over 10kHz).
They mention that final post-processing can be done at a central processing station (I am guessing the Blue Gene one) or locally by the users. Only bottlenecks seems to be the bandwidth.
LOFAR post-processing can take place either at the Central Processor or locally with the users (in particular at Science Centers). If the available Internet capacity is sufficient, intermediate dataproducts can be transported to the user, and local processing can be done. Otherwise processing resources at the Central Processor are available for further data reduction (within the limits of the Central Processor processing budget).
Re:Why can't we distribute this work? (Score:2)
Depends who owns data bits (Score:3, Insightful)
Technical points aside, one political reason for not going to distributed processing is this: some want their data bits to be strictly proprietary.
By distributing, there will be a chance that the distributed data bits would be compromised and captured by someone else (e.g., leading to scooping the cheif investigator). It's a long shot, I know, but that is something that the organization like this need to take into account.
Re:Why can't we distribute this work? (Score:1)
Re:Why can't we distribute this work? (Score:5, Informative)
Of course, you would know this if you had RTFA before you posted...
Re:Why can't we distribute this work? (Score:2)
Re:Why can't we distribute this work? (Score:4, Interesting)
Pyramid Power? (Score:3, Funny)
I hope the people over at LOFAR have considered all the ramifications of Pyramid Power [algonet.se]... ^_^
Re:Pyramid Power? (Score:1)
Re:Pyramid Power? (Score:1)
Re:Software Telescope? (Score:1, Interesting)
It's been 18 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment
Re:Software Telescope? (Score:2)
The real question is.... (Score:3, Funny)
A) A past civilization capable of such feats.
B) A future version of our civilization with time travel.
C) Otherworldly visitors with hyperadvanced technology.
I fear we'll never quite understand this mystery.
---
News for real nerds, stuff that actually matters. [anti-slash.org]
Re:The real question is.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The real question is.... (Score:4, Funny)
So there.
Re:The real question is.... (Score:1)
(Arguments that the complexity could be reduced by switching OS is beyond the scope of this discussion, stamped it!)
Re:The real question is.... (Score:1)
The whole "probing the universe" line is a ruse. "Probing" my as . . . err . . . foot. The antennas are there in order to harness the universal power of the pyramids. Anyone with half a brain could see that! *
So there.
_____
* People with whole brains, on the other hand, frequently have trouble seeing things of that sort.
LOFAR is going to be exciting (Score:5, Informative)
When Lofar Meets Stella [slashdot.org]
350 KM Diameter Radio Telescope Array [slashdot.org]
I was talking to a professor [cornell.edu] in astronomy here and he mentioned about some of the conflicts between US and Europe regarding the plan. That is one of the reasons why US is also working on Square Kilometer Array [skatelescope.org]. LOFAR imaging telescope are designed for the 10-240 MHz frequency range where as SKA will cover 0.15-20GHz or higher. Hopefully the two efforts will complement each other.
Re:LOFAR is going to be exciting (Score:5, Informative)
LOFAR was supposed to be the international forerunner to SKA for a lot of the tech.
Western Australia won the site selection. Dutch government said "if you build it here we'll throw in a bucket load of cash". Dutch reps took the bird in the hand (kind of understandable given the global spending habits of governments on peaceful science).
Everyone else in the original LOFAR weren't (and still aren't) too happy.
Still... it's a nice piece of kit.
SKA development continues. WA is again up for site selection. Speaking as an Oz astronomer I'm hopefull. It's a great site for radio astronomy.
For the person who asked, the antenna design is a folded dipole. Google it
Cheers
Stevo
Re:LOFAR is going to be exciting (Score:1)
Can understand that. If you look at the distribution of the antenna's, some are drowned in the North Sea.
Where's Da Plans...? (Score:5, Funny)
Might not be as useful as first thought... (Score:3, Funny)
and instantaneous that weather forecasting will become "now-casting".
I'm sorry but I don't need some remote sensor device using wi-fi telling
me that it is raining hail stones, the pain from the fractures to my
cranium will be more than enough.
Arash Partow
_________________________________________
Be one who knows what they don't know,
Instead of being one who knows not what they don't know,
Thinking they know everything about all things.
http://www.partow.net/ [partow.net]
Re:Might not be as useful as first thought... (Score:2)
Amazing infrastructure (Score:4, Interesting)
damn... (Score:1)
Rise of software-embodied functionality (Score:5, Interesting)
The shift from hardware-embodied functionality to software-embodied functionality is very profound because of the differences in cost structures. The cost of complexity for software is far lower than the corresponding cost of complexity for hardware. The cost of manufacturing for software is lower than the cost of manufacturing for hardware. The cost of modifying or upgrading software is far lower than the cost of replacing or upgrading hardware. Products with software-embodied functionality can be designed at low cost, made in volume at lost cost and changed at will after sale. The result is greater variety and faster development of new products.
The effects go much farther than cost and variety. Perhaps the most interesting effect is that caused by Moore's law. Whereas mechanical and electronic system have not improved much in the last few decades, CPUs have. Creating software-embodied systems means that the device's performance can become slaved to Moore's law -- a software-embodied product gets a free performance boost with every doubling of transistor count/clockspeed.
I apologize for using this
Re:Rise of software-embodied functionality (Score:5, Insightful)
In the old style development, you had to make sure you had it right before starting production, or else it would cost you a lot of money for retooling and fixing already produced items. Today, you develop a working microcontroller solution (hopefully without hardware bugs), quickly hack together some firmware, and start production and sale.
The consumer will come back with numerous complaints and then is the time to look at the software and maybe release some updates.
Some manufacturers even don't fix software for existing products but just do that in the next model. Early adopters pay the price for a crippled product.
FTFA (Score:2)
Rarely do I see "potato watch" in a "pyramid power" story.
Lovin it.
Why isn't there any tech info on the antenna? (Score:1, Interesting)
Is it a simple dipole? Is one leg just for support? How far down does the wires inside the pipes go (if that's how it works)?
Do they have a box right there at the antenna or do cables run over to a small building where all the other processing stuff is?
If you had a big enough back yard and a 3 Ghz system (with Linux of course) what could you get? (1 acre, 5 acres?)
Re:Why isn't there any tech info on the antenna? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Why isn't there any tech info on the antenna? (Score:1)
Why not Windows? How do you know they don't want it to crash?
Re:Why isn't there any tech info on the antenna? (Score:5, Informative)
The processing box (Score:2, Informative)
Software Telescope (Score:3, Informative)
Software Telescope (Score:1)
Europe's most powerful supercomputer (Score:1)
Re:Europe's most powerful supercomputer (Score:3, Informative)
I believe the most powerful supercomputer in Europe is in Spain rather than the Netherlands as mentioned on th BBC website.
You are right, according to this [top500.org] list the Barcelona Supercomputer is slightly faster. This hurts my dutch pride.
Re:Europe's most powerful supercomputer (Score:1)
Re:Europe's most powerful supercomputer (Score:1)
I know. I have seen the numbers since I am the
intitiator of and project leader for LOIS (LOFAR Outrigger in Scandinavia; www.lois-space.net), a space physics supplement to LOFAR proper and
where we also have a JS20 cluster.
Bo
Re:Europe's most powerful supercomputer (Score:1)
People wanting to participate (Score:4, Informative)
And for the winner, IBM drops in a team to make it happen.
So, what do you want to do, and how do you propose to do it ?
Interesting Approach (Score:3, Interesting)
Some info (Score:4, Interesting)
I did my Master Thesis work [lois-space.net] at IRFU (Institute for Space Physics in Uppsala) [www.irfu.se] with LOIS (LOFAR Outrigger in Scandinavia) [lois-space.net] and may be able to shed some light.
The antennas (or aerials) need not necessarily be pyramid shaped [lois-space.net]. A multitude of shapes exist. The two antenna elements are mounted orthogonally and allow two vector components of the signal to be retrieved. The LOIS antennas go a step further and have three elements, also mounted orthogonally. This means that not only can it decode AM and FM signals, but also phase and polarisation modulated signals. The last one is specially interesting, since polarisation modulation isn't bandwidth limited.
What's even more cool with the system is that it's entirely digital; the signals are demodulated using folding distortion. This means that there isn't any (theoretical) lower limit to the carrier wave frequency, which opens up new possibilities for studying background radiation.
The 10 Gb lines are not just for show. The output from each antenna system can easily use up all that bandwidth, and presently does so. And since the resolution of a cluster depends on the number of antennas, it's all about computing power.
Blind Lake (Score:1)