Exploring the galaxy with the fastest supercomputer, Python, and radio astronomy
Episode #257,
published Sat, Mar 28, 2020, recorded Fri, Mar 27, 2020
With radio astronomy, we can look across many light-years of distance and see incredible details such as the chemical makeup of a given region. Kevin Vinsen and Rodrigo Tobar from ICRAR are using the world's fastest supercomputer along with some sweet Python to process the equivalent of 1,600 hours of standard-definition YouTube video per second.
Links from the show
Links from the show
Kevin on Twitter: @KevinVinsen_
ICRAR on Twitter: @ICRAR
SKA Telscope: skatelescope.org
ICRAR ORG: icrar.org
Video showing data flow and scale: vimeo.com
Summit supercomputer: wikipedia.org
SKA Amazing facts: skatelescope.org
DALiuGE execution framework: github.com
ijson: github.com
ZeroMQ: zeromq.org
ZeroRPC: www.zerorpc.io
Episode transcripts: talkpython.fm
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Subscribe to us on YouTube: youtube.com
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ICRAR on Twitter: @ICRAR
SKA Telscope: skatelescope.org
ICRAR ORG: icrar.org
Video showing data flow and scale: vimeo.com
Summit supercomputer: wikipedia.org
SKA Amazing facts: skatelescope.org
DALiuGE execution framework: github.com
ijson: github.com
ZeroMQ: zeromq.org
ZeroRPC: www.zerorpc.io
Episode transcripts: talkpython.fm
--- Stay in touch with us ---
Subscribe to us on YouTube: youtube.com
Follow Talk Python on Mastodon: talkpython
Follow Michael on Mastodon: mkennedy