The role of interactive super-computing in using HPC for urgent decision making
Nick Brown, Rupert Nash, Gordon Gibb, Bianca Prodan, Max Kontak,, Vyacheslav Olshevsky, and Wei Der Chien

TL;DR
This paper explores how interactive high-performance computing (HPC) can be used in real-time disaster response to support urgent decision-making, moving beyond traditional simulation to a responsive, data-driven approach.
Contribution
It demonstrates the potential of interactive HPC to support real-time disaster response, emphasizing the importance of interactivity for urgent decision-making in critical situations.
Findings
HPC can be adapted for real-time disaster response
Interactivity enhances decision-making accuracy
Responsive HPC supports urgent disaster management
Abstract
Technological advances are creating exciting new opportunities that have the potential to move HPC well beyond traditional computational workloads. In this paper we focus on the potential for HPC to be instrumental in responding to disasters such as wildfires, hurricanes, extreme flooding, earthquakes, tsunamis, winter weather conditions, and accidents. Driven by the VESTEC EU funded H2020 project, our research looks to prove HPC as a tool not only capable of simulating disasters once they have happened, but also one which is able to operate in a responsive mode, supporting disaster response teams making urgent decisions in real-time. Whilst this has the potential to revolutionise disaster response, it requires the ability to drive HPC interactively, both from the user's perspective and also based upon the arrival of data. As such interactivity is a critical component in enabling HPC to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Computing and Data Management · Distributed and Parallel Computing Systems · Advanced Data Storage Technologies
