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Lattice Gauge Theory...
at Brookhaven National Laboratory

continued...

"This new supercomputer will be a world-leading facility which will drive major advances in our understanding of nature," said Lee, who played a critical role in the creation of the RBRC in 1997 and has been director since it was founded. Lee, who was instrumental in securing the funds from RIKEN, said: "This is a remarkable opportunity for the physicists at Columbia and the RBRC to make new discoveries on the frontier of particle and nuclear physics".

The project builds on important work already underway at Columbia University: the development of a highly cost-effective QCDOC supercomputer architecture and the collaborative research program at the RIKEN Laboratory and Columbia involving a previous generation of QCDSP supercomputers.

The name QCDOC derives from Quantum Chromodynamics On a Chip, where Quantum Chromodynamics is the underlying theory of the quark-gluon interaction. This computer design project has been underway at Columbia since the fall of 1999 and represents a close collaboration between Columbia, the T.J. Watson Research Laboratory of IBM, RIKEN and a large collaboration in the United Kingdom known as UKQCD, centered at the University of Edinburgh.

There are currently two large Columbia-designed QCDSP (Quantum Chromodynamics on Digital Signal Processors) installations: a 400 Glfops (or 400 billion arithmetic operations per second) machine at Columbia and a second 600 Gflops computer at the RBRC.
Completed in 1998, these computers are among today's fastest computers being used for fundamental research in nuclear and particle physics.

Both theoretical and experimental research groups in the Columbia Physics Department are major participants in the RBRC research program. The computational field theory group at Columbia, lead by Professors Norman Christ and Robert Mawhinney, plays a leading role in both the design and construction of the QCDSP and QCDOC computers and the physics program supported by these machines.

This group explores the transition between normal nuclear matter and a new state of matter called the quark-gluon plasma, which is believed to have existed for a fleeting moment as the Universe cooled, for a few microseconds following the Big Bang. The properties of this phase of matter can be studied by both theoretical simulations with powerful computers and through actual collisions between heavy nuclei produced by the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) recently commissioned at the Brookhaven Laboratory.
The group also studies the underlying properties of quarks. Of particular interest is a single small parameter which spoils the symmetry between quarks and anti-quarks and which may explain why our present Universe is predominantly composed of matter rather than anti-matter.

At an international meeting in Berlin last year, the Columbia-Brookhaven-RIKEN collaboration announced the results of a three-year calculation which determined two experimentally measured quantities in rare particle decays in terms of this single small parameter. (Similar results were presented by an independent Japanese group at this same meeting.) While these calculations successfully determined a number of quantities involved in these rare particle decays, their prediction for the matter-antimatter asymmetry are surprisingly different from experiments.

"The question is whether this disagreement is caused by a flaw in the standard model of particle physics or by the numerical approximations in the calculation," said Professor Christ, adding that this crucial question is likely to be solved through calculations made possible by this new supercomputer.

On the experimental side, the Physics Department's heavy ion research group, composed of Professors Brian Cole, James Nagle and William Zajc, is attempting to create and detect the quark-gluon plasma in the laboratory, using RHIC, Brookhaven's newest particle accelerator. RHIC produces the world's highest energy nuclear collisions, which are then measured in the $100M PHENIX detector. Professor Zajc is the spokesperson for this 400-member international collaboration, which began taking data with the PHENIX apparatus in the year 2000. The PHENIX experiment is also designed to make fundamental measurements elucidating the origin of the proton spin, using instrumentation which was also funded as part of the RIKEN program.

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Last Modified: September 3, 2008