Future Visitors

Sept. 19-20, 2008
John Seiradakis
(Aristotle University of Thessaloniki)

Nov. 14-15, 2008
Avi Loeb
(Harvard University)


more future visitors
  Welcome to our website

The Theoretical Astrophysics Group at Northwestern studies a broad range of cutting-edge research problems in the physics of compact objects, from massive black holes to neutron stars, pulsars and white dwarfs. Many of these problems involve interactions in binary systems, which can lead to hydrodynamic phenomena such as accretion flows and binary mergers, high energy phenomena (X-ray, gamma-ray emission), and strong sources of gravitational radiation.

Our group also uses supercomputers to simulate the dynamical evolution of dense star clusters, including those around supermassive black holes in galactic nuclei, and the formation and evolution of planetary systems. Our in-house computational facilities include a large number of Macintosh and Linux workstations as well as a parallel computer cluster, Typhoon, comprising 80 processors, 70GB of RAM, and 5TB of disk space. Our new Beowulf computer cluster, Fugu, is comprised of of 78 general-purpose nodes and two dedicated nodes designed specifically for n-body calculations, as well as a large compute node optimized for parallel tasks. Each node contains either two quad core 2.2 GHz (30) or two dual core 2.8 GHz (48) AMD Opteron processors with 2 GB of RAM per core. The large compute node features 4 quad core 2.2 GHz AMD Opteron processors and 32 GB of RAM as well as four 146GB SAS 15k RPM hard drives. There are 13 TB of hard disk space available in a RAID-6 array which is attached to the master node via mini SAS channel. The master node is connected to the central network switch via a 10 Gb/s Ethernet adapter, while the rest of the nodes are connected using a 1 Gb/s network. The cluster runs the ROCKS clustering operating system, and uses Sun Grid Engine with Condor checkpointing support for job scheduling.

Associated faculty in the Physics and Astronomy Department also work on problems at the interface between astrophysics and particle physics, such as cosmology and neutrino astrophysics, and between nonlinear dynamics and general relativity. We often collaborate with astronomers at other universities around the world, as in our many projects based on data from the Chandra X- ray Observatory and the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory.


  Announcements

Job Opportunities

See our current job opportunities.


New Computing Cluster

Our new Beowulf computer cluster continues to run at 100% utilization! A second purchase stage is planned for Fall or Winter 2008.



  Quick Links





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