HLRS-Led ENRICH Project Guiding Sustainable Digitalization in Baden-Württemberg hpcwire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hpcwire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
German National HPC Centre provides resources to look for cracks in the standard model eurekalert.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eurekalert.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Muons, particles akin to electrons, have kepts physicists heads spinning for more than a decade, because an experimental measurement of their magnetic properties (1) disagrees with theory. Could this be caused by unknown particles or forces?
A new theoretical calculation of this parameter, involving CNRS physicists and published in the journal Nature, has reduced the discrepancy with the experimental measurement. The debate nevertheless continues.
For over 10 years, measurement of the magnetic properties of the muon (an ephemeral cousin of the electron) has exhibited disagreement with theoretical predictions. This suggests a possible gap in the standard model of particle physics (2), possibly providing a glimpse of a more exotic physics. The first results of Fermilab s Muon g-2 experiment, which measures one of these properties known as the muon magnetic moment, will be revealed on 7 April 2021.
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The High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart, known as HLRS, is adding some Nvidia Corp.-powered oomph to its Hawk supercomputer, which is already considered the fastest general-purpose machine for industrial production in Europe.
The Hawk was installed earlier this year and is seen as HLRS’ flagship supercomputer. It’s based on a Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co.-Apollo system and currently ranks as the 16th most powerful supercomputer in the world. It’s also the fastest system in Europe that’s built purely on a central processing unit architecture.
That will soon change, though, as Hawk is about to be turbocharged with 192 of Nvidia’s latest A100 graphics processing units linked via a Mellanox InfiniBand network. The A100 was launched earlier this year and is said to be 20 times more powerful than Nvidia’s previous GPU, the Volta. It’s designed for the most advanced artificial intelligence, data analytics and cloud-based graphics workloads.