Home to nine user facilities, Oak Ridge National Laboratory is the Department of Energy’s largest open science research laboratory and a world leader in scientific data generation.
Home to nine user facilities, Oak Ridge National Laboratory is the Department of Energy’s largest open science research laboratory and a world leader in scientific data generation.
Simulations and experiments that take place on the laboratory’s state-of-the-art resources, including the nation's most powerful supercomputer, generate massive datasets that help drive scientific progress and inform national security measures.
Using specialized software tools, ORNL staff transport data from individual computers to an interconnected network, enabling the distribution of the data to different facilities and making it publicly accessible.
The Summit supercomputer—an IBM high-performance computing (HPC) system located at ORNL’s Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF)—provides researchers at ORNL and around the world with the compute power, memory bandwidth, and storage capacity to extract meaningful insights from massive datasets with unprecedented accuracy and speed.
Through infrastructure and expertise, ORNL’s Compute and Data Environment for Science (CADES) addresses pressing data challenges. The platform enables user facilities, staff members, and research teams to process, manage, and analyze large amounts of data by leveraging HPC systems, scalable storage resources, and other analytical tools.
At ORNL, some of the world’s most advanced scientific facilities and instruments generate large and unique scientific datasets that are ideal for artificial intelligence (AI) analysis. The laboratory’s AI Initiative helps scientists accelerate times to solution and equips research teams with novel data capabilities to tackle complex scientific and national security challenges.
ORNL hosts genomic and lifestyle data, as well as medical histories voluntarily provided by nearly 600,000 veterans, for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Insights from VA data could facilitate medical breakthroughs in suicide prevention, opioid addition, prostate cancer, and other conditions.