Mathematical and Computer Sciences and Engineering Division

Facilities

KAUST boasts the largest collection of best-in-class research laboratories, facilities, and equipment of any university in the world. Students and researchers have unparalleled access to these resources, all of which will enable major scientific breakthroughs.

Those associated with the Mathematical and Computer Sciences and Engineering Division use a number of cutting-edge facilities, including:

  • The Shaheen supercomputer, which is one of the world’s fastest in an academic environment. Developed with IBM, it is capable of 222 teraflops, or 222 trillion floating point operations per second. It also includes:
    • A 16-rack IBM Blue Gene/P system with 65,536 independent cores
    • A 1,500-node Linux cluster with two quad-core Nehalem processors per node
    • 64 terabytes of aggregate memory capacity
    • Petaflop/s capability expected within the next two to three years, with scalability for future demand
  • The CORNEA visualization center, a fully immersive, six-sided virtual reality facility that turns data into 3D structures that students and researchers can interact with and examine as part of their work. Features include:
    • A Mechdyne-built VL-6 with the world’s highest resolution (100 million pixels) and brightest (10,000 lumens) visualization environments.
    • 24 Quad HD Projectors, the highest native resolution (4096x2160 pixels) projectors
    • An advanced spatial/surround sound audio system that adapts to match visual images - the only known research center of this type in the world

Other research universities in the Kingdom, region, and world will link to the University’s supercomputer and laboratory facilities via the 10 gigabytes per second (Gbps) Saudi Arabian Advanced Research and Education Network (SAREN).

This unique blend of facilities means that experimental studies at KAUST will be almost unconstrained by physical resources.