Anton, a special-purpose machine for molecular dynamics simulation

DE Shaw, MM Deneroff, RO Dror, JS Kuskin… - Communications of the …, 2008 - dl.acm.org
DE Shaw, MM Deneroff, RO Dror, JS Kuskin, RH Larson, JK Salmon, C Young, B Batson
Communications of the ACM, 2008dl.acm.org
The ability to perform long, accurate molecular dynamics (MD) simulations involving proteins
and other biological macro-molecules could in principle provide answers to some of the
most important currently outstanding questions in the fields of biology, chemistry, and
medicine. A wide range of biologically interesting phenomena, however, occur over
timescales on the order of a millisecond---several orders of magnitude beyond the duration
of the longest current MD simulations. We describe a massively parallel machine called …
The ability to perform long, accurate molecular dynamics (MD) simulations involving proteins and other biological macro-molecules could in principle provide answers to some of the most important currently outstanding questions in the fields of biology, chemistry, and medicine. A wide range of biologically interesting phenomena, however, occur over timescales on the order of a millisecond---several orders of magnitude beyond the duration of the longest current MD simulations.
We describe a massively parallel machine called Anton, which should be capable of executing millisecond-scale classical MD simulations of such biomolecular systems. The machine, which is scheduled for completion by the end of 2008, is based on 512 identical MD-specific ASICs that interact in a tightly coupled manner using a specialized highspeed communication network. Anton has been designed to use both novel parallel algorithms and special-purpose logic to dramatically accelerate those calculations that dominate the time required for a typical MD simulation. The remainder of the simulation algorithm is executed by a programmable portion of each chip that achieves a substantial degree of parallelism while preserving the flexibility necessary to accommodate anticipated advances in physical models and simulation methods.
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