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NASA Scientists Simulate Black Hole Collision

Krishna Dagli writes to tell us Yahoo! News is reporting that NASA scientists have managed to simulate the merger of two massive orbiting black holes. Using technology from Silicon Graphics, Inc. built from 20 SGI Altix systems the team was able to show how the resulting gravitational waves would interact with surrounding space.

8 of 63 comments (clear)

  1. didn't know processors have memory by uioreanu · · Score: 3, Funny
    By linking four, 512-processor Altix systems .... NASA enabled the scientists to access all of the processors' memory at once.
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    cut this signatures madness. stop reading them now!
    1. Re:didn't know processors have memory by eliot1785 · · Score: 3, Informative

      They actually have several layers of memory (registers, L1, L2...), it's just not called that.

      I don't think that's what they meant though.

    2. Re:didn't know processors have memory by prefect42 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I think you need to relax your terminology a little. On an Altix box you have what used to be called C-Bricks. Basically a unit that contains processors and RAM. Those all link together over NUMAFlex (with appropriate routers) to form your large shared memory machine. But the RAM is still localised (as it's a NUMA architecture). So 'main memory' should be considered as 'owned' by a processor (or processors). If you'd made an OpenMOSIX cluster to match you'd refer to it as a machine's memory, but since all these C-Bricks form a single machine whole, you can't do that.

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      jh

  2. Black holes colliding? by MindCheese · · Score: 4, Funny

    Man, that would suck.

    1. Re:Black holes colliding? by MickDownUnder · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think you meant.... that would be heavy man !

  3. How? by squoozer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wasn't aware that we understood how one black hole worked so how can this team perform a simulation of two coming together and hope to get anything useful out? I admit there is an outside chance they will stumble on the correct result but can they prove it's correct?

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    I used to have a better sig but it broke.
  4. Dude ... by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 4, Funny
    Man, that would suck
    ... don't be so dramatic, intellectual and moral black holes collide on Capitol Hill every day and we still haven't been sucked in.
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    Only to idiots, are orders laws.
    -- Henning von Tresckow
  5. Some more info. by Stoutlimb · · Score: 4, Informative

    I actually went to a seminar years back by one of the individuals working on this. The equation alone filled pages, and was something he had to derive by hand. He showed us a cgi video of the results. The 2 black holes approached, snapped together, and the resulting larger black hole temporarily oscillated. The strange part was partway through the oscillation, the black hole just popped out of existence, and then reappeard several seconds later.

    In the question and answer period, a student asked why this gap in the calculations. The professor explained there was no gap in the calculations, but rather, the result of the calculations was non-euclidean in nature, so it was physically impossible to display it in a 3d model. At about that time, half of the undergrad audience whispered a Keanu Reeves style "whoah..."

    Don't ask me any of the details, this was years ago in a course on stellar astrophysics that I have mostly forgot. This is just something anecdotal. Astrophysicists have been working on this black hole merger thing for a very long time. The computer labs at the time had P133's running. I'd love to see what they're doing now, but that site wasn't very big on actual information.