Randy Meyer, HPE & Paul Shellard, University of Cambridge | HPE Discover 2017 Madrid
>> Announcer: Live from Madrid, Spain, it's the Cube, covering HPE Discover Madrid 2017, brought to you by Hewlett Packard Enterprise. >> Welcome back to Madrid, Spain everybody, this is the Cube, the leader in live tech coverage. We're here covering HPE Discover 2017. I'm Dave Vellante with my cohost for the week, Peter Burris, Randy Meyer is back, he's the vice president and general manager Synergy and Mission Critical Solutions at Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Paul Shellerd is here, the director of the Center for Theoretical Cosmology at Cambridge University, thank you very much for coming on the Cube. >> It's a pleasure. >> Good to see you again. >> Yeah good to be back for the second time this week. I think that's, day stay outlets play too. >> Talking about computing meets the cosmos. >> Well it's exciting, yesterday we talked about Superdome Flex that we announced, we talked about it in the commercial space, where it's taking HANA and Orcale databases to the next level but there's a whole different side to what you can do with in memory compute. It's all in this high performance computing space. You think about the problems people want to solve in fluid dynamics, in forecasting, in all sorts of analytics problems, high performance compute, one of the things it does is it generates massive amounts of data that people then want to do things with. They want to compare that data to what their model said, okay can I run that against, they want to take that data and visualize it, okay how do I go do that. The more you can do that in memory, it means it's just faster to deal with because you're not going and writing this stuff off the disk, you're not moving it to another cluster back and forth, so we're seeing this burgeoning, the HPC guys would call it fat nodes, where you want to put lots of memory and eliminate the IO to go make their jobs easier and Professor Shallard will talk about a lot of that in terms of what they're doing at the Cosmos Institute, but this is a trend, you don't have to be a university. We're seeing this inside of oil and gas companies, aerospace engineering companies, anybody that's solving these complex computational problems that have an analytical element to whether it's comparative model, visualize, do something with that once you've done that. >> Paul, explain more about what it is you do. >> Well in the Cosmos Group, of which I'm the head, we're interested in two things, cosmology, which is trying to understand where the universe comes from, the whole big bang and then we're interested in black holes, particularly their collisions which produce gravitational waves, so they're the two main areas, relativity and cosmology. >> That's a big topic. I don't even know where to start, I just want to know okay what have you learned and can you summarize it for a lay person, where are you today, what can you share with us that we can understand? >> What we do is we take our mathematical models and we make predictions about the real universe and so we try and compare those to the latest observational data. We're in a particularly exciting period of time at the moment because of a flood of new data about the universe and about black holes and in the last two years, gravitational waves were discovered, there's a Nobel prize this year so lots of things are happening. It's a very data driven science so we have to try and keep up with this flood of new data which is getting larger and larger and also with new types of data, because suddenly gravitational waves are the latest thing to look at. >> What are the sources of data and new sources of data that you're tapping? >> Well, in cosmology we're mainly interested in the cosmic microwave background. >> Peter: Yeah the sources of data are the cosmos. >> Yeah right, so this is relic radiation left over from the big bang fireball, it's like a photograph of the universe, a blueprint and then also in the distribution of galaxies, so 3D maps of the universe and we've only, we're in a new age of exploration, we've only got a tiny fraction of the universe mapped so far and we're trying to extract new information about the origin of the universe from that data. In relativity, we've got these gravitational waves, these ripples in space time, they're traversing across the universe, they're essentially earthquakes in the universe and they're sound waves or seismic waves that propagate to us from these very violent events. >> I want to take you to the gravitational waves because in many respects, it's an example of a lot of what's here in action. Here's what I mean, that the experiment and correct me if I'm wrong, but it's basically, you create a, have two lasers perpendicular to each other, shooting a signal about two or three miles in that direction and it is the most precise experiment ever undertaken because what you're doing is you're measuring the time it takes for one laser versus another laser and that time is a function of the slight stretching that comes from the gravitational rays. That is an unbelievable example of edge computing, where you have just the tolerances to do that, that's not something you can send back to the cloud, you gotta do a lot of the compute right there, right? >> That's right, yes so a gravitational wave comes by and you shrink one way and you stretch the other. >> Peter: It distorts the space time. >> Yeah you become thinner and these tiny, tiny changes are what's measured and nobody expected gravitational waves to be discovered in 2015, we all thought, oh another five years, another five years, they've always been saying, we'll discover them, we'll discover them, but it happened. >> And since then, it's been used two or three times to discover new types of things and there's now a whole, I'm sure this is very centric to what you're doing, there's now a whole concept of gravitational information, can in fact becomes an entirely new branch of cosmology, have I got that right? >> Yeah you have, it's called multimessenger astronomy now because you don't just see the universe in electromagnetic waves, in light, you hear the universe. This is qualitatively different, it's sound waves coming across the universe and so combining these two, the latest event was where they heard the event first, then they turned their telescope and they saw it. So much information came out of that, even information about cosmology, because these signals are traveling hundreds of billions of light years across to us, we're getting a picture of the whole universe as they propagate all that way, so we're able to measure the expansion rate of the universe from that point. >> The techniques for the observational, the technology for observation, what is that, how has that evolved? >> Well you've got the wrong guy here. I'm from the theory group, we're doing the predictions and these guys with their incredible technology, are seeing the data, seeing and it's imagined, the whole point is you've gotta get the predictions and then you've gotta look in the data for a needle in the haystack which is this signature of these black holes colliding. >> You think about that, I have a model, I'm looking for the needle in the haystack, that's a different way to describe an in memory analytic search pattern recognition problem, that's really what it is. This is the world's largest pattern recognition problem. >> Most precise, and literally. >> And that's an observation that confirms your theory right? >> Confirms the theory, maybe it was your theory. >> I'm actually a cosmologist, so in my group we have relativists who are actively working on the black hole collisions and making predictions about this stuff. >> But they're dampening vibration from passing trucks and these things and correcting it, it's unbelievable. But coming back to the technology, the technology is, one of the reasons why this becomes so exciting and becomes practical is because for the first time, the technology has gotten to the point where you can assume that the problem you're trying to solve, that you're focused on and you don't have to translate it in technology terms, so talk a little bit about, because in many respects, that's where business is. Business wants to be able to focus on the problem and how to think the problem differently and have the technology to just respond. They don't want to have to start with the technology and then imagine what they can do with it. >> I think from our point of view, it's a very fast moving field, things are changing, new data's coming in. The data's getting bigger and bigger because instruments are getting packed tighter and tighter, there's more information, so we've got a computational problem as well, so we've got to get more computational power but there's new types of data, like suddenly there's gravitational waves. There's new types of analysis that we want to do so we want to be able to look at this data in a very flexible way and ingest it and explore new ideas more quickly because things are happening so fast, so that's why we've adopted this in memory paradigm for a number of years now and the latest incarnation of this is the HP Superdome flex and that's a shared memory system, so you can just pull in all your data and explore it without carefully programming how the memory is distributed around. We find this is very easy for our users to develop data analytic pipelines to develop their new theoretical models and to compare the two on the single system. It's also very easy for new users to use. You don't have to be an advanced programmer to get going, you can just stay with the science in a sense. >> You gotta have a PhD in Physics to do great in Physics, you don't have to have a PhD in Physics and technology. >> That's right, yeah it's a very flexible program. A flexible architecture with which to program so you can more or less take your laptop pipeline, develop your pipeline on a laptop, take it to the Superdome and then scale it up to these huge memory problems. >> And get it done fast and you can iterate. >> You know these are the most brilliant scientists in the world, bar none, I made the analogy the other day. >> Oh, thanks. >> You're supposed to say aw, chucks. >> Peter: Aw, chucks. >> Present company excepted. >> Oh yeah, that's right. >> I made the analogy of, imagine I.M. Pei or Frank Lloyd Wright or someone had to be their own general contractor, right? No, they're brilliant at designing architectures and imagining things that no one else could imagine and then they had people to go do that. This allows the people to focus on the brilliance of the science without having to go become the expert programmer, we see that in business too. Parallel programming techniques are difficult, spoken like an old tandem guy, parallelism is hard but to the extent that you can free yourself up and focus on the problem and not have to mess around with that, it makes life easier. Some problems parallelize well, but a lot of them don't need to be and you can allow the data to shine, you can allow the science to shine. >> Is it correct that the barrier in your ability to reach a conclusion or make a discovery is the ability to find that needle in a haystack or maybe there are many, but. >> Well, if you're talking about obstacles to progress, I would say computational power isn't the obstacle, it's developing the software pipelines and it's the human personnel, the smart people writing the codes that can look for the needle in the haystack who have the efficient algorithms to do that and if they're cobbled by having to think very hard about the hardware and the architecture they're working with and how they've parallelized the problem, our philosophy is much more that you solve the problem, you validate it, it can be quite inefficient if you like, but as long as it's a working program that gets you to where you want, then your second stage you worry about making it efficient, putting it on accelerators, putting it on GPUs, making it go really fast and that's, for many years now we've bought these very flexible shared memory or in memory is the new word for it, in memory architectures which allow new users, graduate students to come straight in without a Master's degree in high performance computing, they can start to tackle problems straight away. >> It's interesting, we hear the same, you talk about it at the outer reaches of the universe, I hear it at the inner reaches of the universe from the life sciences companies, we want to map the genome and we want to understand the interaction of various drug combinations with that genetic structure to say can I tune exactly a vaccine or a drug or something else for that patient's genetic makeup to improve medical outcomes? The same kind of problem, I want to have all this data that I have to run against a complex genome sequence to find the one that gets me to the answer. From the macro to the micro, we hear this problem in all different sorts of languages. >> One of the things we have our clients, mainly in business asking us all the time, is with each, let me step back, as analysts, not the smartest people in the world, as you'll attest I'm sure for real, as analysts, we like to talk about change and we always talked about mainframe being replaced by minicomputer being replaced by this or that. I like to talk in terms of the problems that computing's been able to take on, it's been able to take on increasingly complex, challenging, more difficult problems as a consequence of the advance of technology, very much like you're saying, the advance of technology allows us to focus increasingly on the problem. What kinds of problems do you think physicists are gonna be able to attack in the next five years or so as we think about the combination of increasingly powerful computing and an increasingly simple approach to use it? >> I think the simplification you're indicating here is really going to more memory. Holding your whole workload in memory, so that you, one of the biggest bottlenecks we find is ingesting the data and then writing it out, but if you can do everything at once, then that's the key element, so one of the things we've been working on a great deal is in situ visualization for example, so that you see the black holes coming together and you see that you've set the right parameters, they haven't missed each other or something's gone wrong with your simulation, so that you do the post-processing at the same time, you never need the intermediate data products, so larger and larger memory and the computational power that balances with that large memory. It's all very well to get a fat node, but you don't have the computational power to use all those terrabytes, so that's why this in memory architecture of the Superdome Flex is much more balanced between the two. What are the problems that we're looking forward to in terms of physics? Well, in cosmology we're looking for these hints about the origin of the universe and we've made a lot of progress analyzing the Plank satellite data about the cosmic microwave background. We're honing in on theories of inflation, which is where all the structure in the universe comes from, from Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, rapid period of expansion just like inflation in the financial markets in the very early universe, okay and so we're trying to identify can we distinguish between different types and are they gonna tell us whether the universe comes from a higher dimensional theory, ten dimensions, gets reduced to three plus one or lots of clues like that, we're looking for statistical fingerprints of these different models. In gravitational waves of course, this whole new area, we think of the cosmic microwave background as a photograph of the early universe, well in fact gravitational waves look right back to the earliest moment, fractions of a nanosecond after the big bang and so it may be that the answers, the clues that we're looking for come from gravitational waves and of course there's so much in astrophysics that we'll learn about compact objects, about neutron stars, about the most energetic events there are in the whole universe. >> I never thought about the idea, because cosmic radiation background goes back what, about 300,000 years if that's right. >> Yeah that's right, you're very well informed, 400,000 years because 300 is. >> Not that well informed. >> 370,000. >> I never thought about the idea of gravitational waves as being noise from the big bang and you make sense with that. >> Well with the cosmic microwave background, we're actually looking for a primordial signal from the big bang, from inflation, so it's yeah. Well anyway, what were you gonna say Randy? >> No, I just, it's amazing the frontiers we're heading down, it's kind of an honor to be able to enable some of these things, I've spent 30 years in the technology business and heard customers tell me you transformed by business or you helped me save costs, you helped me enter a new market. Never before in 30 plus years of being in this business have I had somebody tell me the things that you're providing are helping me understand the origins of the universe. It's an honor to be affiliated with you guys. >> Oh no, the honor's mine Randy, you're producing the hardware, the tools that allow us to do this work. >> Well now the honor's ours for coming onto the Cube. >> That's right, how do we learn more about your work and your discoveries, inclusions. >> In terms of looking at. >> Are there popular authors we could read other than Stephen Hawking? >> Well, read Stephen's books, they're very good, he's got a new one called A Briefer History of Time so it's more accessible than the Brief History of Time. >> So your website is. >> Yeah our website is ctc.cam.ac.uk, the center for theoretical cosmology and we've got some popular pages there, we've got some news stories about the latest things that have happened like the HP partnership that we're developing and some nice videos about the work that we're doing actually, very nice videos of that. >> Certainly, there were several videos run here this week that if people haven't seen them, go out, they're available on Youtube, they're available at your website, they're on Stephen's Facebook page also I think. >> Can you share that website again? >> Well, actually you can get the beautiful videos of Stephen and the rest of his group on the Discover website, is that right? >> I believe so. >> So that's at HP Discover website, but your website is? >> Is ctc.cam.ac.uk and we're just about to upload those videos ourselves. >> Can I make a marketing suggestion. >> Yeah. >> Simplify that. >> Ctc.cam.ac.uk. >> Yeah right, thank you. >> We gotta get the Cube at one of these conferences, one of these physics conferences and talk about gravitational waves. >> Bone up a little bit, you're kind of embarrassing us here, 100,000 years off. >> He's better informed than you are. >> You didn't need to remind me sir. Thanks very much for coming on the Cube, great pleasure having you today. >> Thank you. >> Keep it right there everybody, Mr. Universe and I will be back after this short break. (upbeat techno music)
SUMMARY :
brought to you by Hewlett Packard Enterprise. the director of the Center for Theoretical Cosmology Yeah good to be back for the second time this week. to what you can do with in memory compute. Well in the Cosmos Group, of which I'm the head, okay what have you learned and can you summarize it and in the last two years, gravitational waves in the cosmic microwave background. in the universe and they're sound waves or seismic waves and it is the most precise experiment ever undertaken and you shrink one way and you stretch the other. Yeah you become thinner and these tiny, tiny changes of the universe from that point. I'm from the theory group, we're doing the predictions for the needle in the haystack, that's a different way and making predictions about this stuff. the technology has gotten to the point where you can assume to get going, you can just stay with the science in a sense. You gotta have a PhD in Physics to do great so you can more or less take your laptop pipeline, in the world, bar none, I made the analogy the other day. This allows the people to focus on the brilliance is the ability to find that needle in a haystack the problem, our philosophy is much more that you solve From the macro to the micro, we hear this problem One of the things we have our clients, at the same time, you never need the I never thought about the idea, Yeah that's right, you're very well informed, from the big bang and you make sense with that. from the big bang, from inflation, so it's yeah. It's an honor to be affiliated with you guys. the hardware, the tools that allow us to do this work. and your discoveries, inclusions. so it's more accessible than the Brief History of Time. that have happened like the HP partnership they're available at your website, to upload those videos ourselves. We gotta get the Cube at one of these conferences, of embarrassing us here, 100,000 years off. You didn't need to remind me sir. Keep it right there everybody, Mr. Universe and I
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