Accelerating the Accelerator: Scientist Speeds CERN's HPC With GPUs, AI
NVIDIA News, Monday, June 5,2023
Maria Girone sees GPU-powered machine learning as part of the future for physicists driving scientific discovery. Since 2002, the Ph.D. in particle physics has worked on a grid of systems across 170 sites in more than 40 countries that support CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC), itself poised for a major upgrade.
Maria Girone is expanding the world's largest network of scientific computers with accelerated computing and AI.
Since 2002, the Ph.D. in particle physics has worked on a grid of systems across 170 sites in more than 40 countries that support CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC), itself poised for a major upgrade.
A high-luminosity version of the giant accelerator (HL-LHC) will produce 10x more proton collisions, spawning exabytes of data a year. That's an order of magnitude more than it generated in 2012 when two of its experiments uncovered the Higgs boson, a subatomic particle that validated scientists' understanding of the universe.