The series of Lichtenberg high-performance computers at TU Darmstadt provides computing resources for researchers from academia and public research facilities in Germany. The multifaceted architecture of the high performance computer allows for flexible and efficient scientific computing, especially for computationally intensive applications.
In mid-July, Lichtenberg II high-performance computer of TU Darmstadt was officially put into operation. Equipped with the latest technology, it sets standards in performance and energy efficiency and thus offers the best conditions for excellent research. Our two-minute film provides insights into the ceremonial inauguration and a tour of the high-performance computer.
In 2020, the first expansion stage of the Lichtenberg II system with 643 computing nodes was put into operation; this will be expanded by 581 computing nodes with the second expansion stage. Together, the two expansion stages will provide their users with a theoretical peak performance of approximately 8.5 petaflops per second (PFlop/s) through processors and 1.7 petaflops per second through accelerators. The main memory totals 563 terabytes, the storage system for data around 6 petabytes.
Energy-efficient computer systems and sustainable use are key goals for TU Darmstadt. For this reason, the waste heat from Lichtenberg II is not simply released into the environment, but during the heating period, a significant portion is fed into the district heating network that connects all buildings on the Lichtwiese campus.
For this purpose, Lichtenberg II uses direct and highly efficient hot water cooling to fully utilize the power of the processors. In the process, special heat exchangers and coolant distributors enable high return temperatures of more than 45 degrees Celsius to ensure sensible reuse of energy and efficient cooling. This leads to a significantly improved CO2 and energy balance and is an important step towards sustainable high-performance computing.
The entire Lichtenberg II system (all expansion stages) is funded by the German Federal Government and the State of Hesse with a total amount of ~15 million euros.
The experts of the (Hessian Competence Center for High Performance Computing) will provide for consultancy and scientific support on using the cluster efficiently and hosts various workshops on scientific HPC. “Hessisches Komptenzzentrum für Hochleistungsrechnen”
HLR-Störung infolge Ausfall des Kältesystems
Mai 05, 2024
Im HLR-Gebäude ist in der Nacht das Kältesystem ausgefallen. Gegen 9:15 Uhr wurde auf Ersatzkühlung durch den Kältering umgeschaltet. Der HLR ist infolge einer Störung des Dateisystems nicht verfügbar. Die Behebung und Prüfung wird voraussichtlich bis Montag dauern.
HPC with reduced resources
February 08, 2024
Lichtenberg HPC available with reduced resources
After a short in the server room's power distribution system, which rendered in the whole cluster inoperative, the Lichtenberg cluster is now active with about 35% capacity.
Workshop Series: Parallel Computing and GPU Computing with MATLAB on the Lichtenberg II Cluster
February 06, 2024
13.02. + 27.02.: Speed up your MATLAB programs
The workshop series will take place on 13 th and probably 27 th February 2024. This workshop is for researchers at TU Darmstadt who would like to use parallel and GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) computing in MATLAB, and to scale their computations to the Lichtenberg II Cluster.