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26. March 2025

Marvin: the Supercomputer Redefining Research at the University of Bonn Marvin: the Supercomputer Redefining Research at the University of Bonn

Seven exciting projects created using Marvin have now faced off against one another in a contest won by a group that has laid the foundations for a form of ChatGPT in Portuguese.

Marvin the supercomputer has been available to researchers for exactly a year. The University of Bonn is now taking a look back over 365 days in which its computing power has helped bring countless projects to life. At an event on the Poppelsdorf Campus, researchers and other staff recently had the opportunity to celebrate a whole year of successful high-performance computing (HPC) and crown the three most exciting projects from all manner of different disciplines.

Innovative projects.
Innovative projects. - The projects that made it into the top three were very different yet all innovative. The winners of the competition to find the most exciting projects delivered with Marvin’s help over the past year (from left to right): Katrin Drysch came second with “Development of magnesium batteries” behind Aniket Sen, Shiza Fatimah, Nicolas Kluge Corrêa and Sophia Falk, who won with “Tucano: Advancing Neural Text Generation for Portuguese.” Mohamad Hakam Shams Eddin was half of the team that secured third spot for “Identifying Spatio-Temporal Drivers of Extreme Events” © Photo: Barbara Fommann / Uni Bonn
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“Marvin isn’t just a computer,” explained Professor Maren Bennewitz, Vice Rector for Digitalization and Information Management. “It’s a real game-changer for the University of Bonn and has opened the door to some entirely new scientific possibilities.” She stressed the important role that the supercomputer is playing in the University’s strategies for excellence and digitalization: “We’ve invested substantial amounts in building state-of-the-art HPC infrastructure for research as part of our Excellence and Digital Strategies. This has been made possible in particular by the structures that we’ve recently put in place in the Digital Science Center, or DiCe.”

A trophy for the most exciting Marvin project

Seven finalists representing a range of disciplines—from theoretical chemistry and geodesy through to linguistics, biology and astrophysics—presented their exceptional projects, which came to fruition with the help of calculations run on Marvin. The 100 or so guests then used a smartphone app to vote for their favorite. Ultimately, the winners’ trophy was claimed by the interdisciplinary team made up of Nicolas Kluge Corrêa (philosophy), Aniket Sen (physics), Shiza Fatimah (computer science) and Sophia Falk (environmental sciences) for their project entitled “Tucano: Advancing Neural Text Generation for Portuguese.” As well as “extra computing capacity,” the first prize also includes close project support from a member of the HPC support team, whose assistance—from code testing to software installation and specific training—is just what the group of researchers needs.

“We couldn’t be happier!” Nicolas Kluge Corrêa exclaimed. “Our project is about developing models like ChatGPT for languages for which there’s less data available than for English, say.” He and his team started by laying the groundwork for Portuguese, because he himself comes from Brazil and speaks the language. But the team has a lot more in the pipeline: “Next up, we’re planning to do the same kind of research for some of our other languages. Aniket speaks Bengali and Shiza Hindi.” He stressed that none of this would be possible without Marvin “and the fantastic support we’ve had from the University of Bonn.” Second place went to Katrin Drysch for her project “Development of magnesium batteries,” with Mohamad Hakam Shams Eddin and Jürgen Gall coming third with “Identifying Spatio-Temporal Drivers of Extreme Events.”

A wide range of services for researchers, from technical support to consulting

Making Marvin available to researchers is not just about cutting-edge technology, Vice Rector Bennewitz pointed out, but also about providing an easily accessible service. “Right from the start, we also wanted to build central HPC infrastructure with corresponding support structures. Under your leadership, Dirk Barbi, the HPC team in University IT has grown into a vital unit for operation and training. And together with you, Petra Mutzel, we’ve succeeded in establishing the High Performance Computing and Analytics Lab at the DiCe as a key hub for advising our researchers.”

A year full of groundbreaking research findings

Professor Petra Mutzel and Dr. Dirk Barbi, ably supported at the event by Dr. Daniel Minge from the Modelling Transdisciplinary Research Area, took the opportunity to look back over the past 12 months. “Marvin has given our researchers a toolkit for all kinds of different disciplines, from revolutionary simulations in theoretical chemistry to pioneering applications of AI for analyzing historical manuscripts,” explained Professor Mutzel. She and her team are responsible for advising researchers on using Marvin. Dr. Barbi, who is in charge of the technology together with his team, added: “In Marvin, we’ve created a stable piece of central infrastructure that unlocks research at the very highest level. We’re well equipped, including when it comes to artificial intelligence.”

A glimpse into the future world of supercomputing

Another highlight at the event was a lecture by Dr. Timothy Mattson, one of the world’s leading experts on parallel programming. In his keynote address, entitled “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Future of HPC – Processors, People and Programming,” he provided some fascinating insights into the challenges and opportunities for supercomputer research over the next few years. Dr. Mattson will spend the coming days engaging in direct dialogue with the researchers from the University of Bonn in a series of workshops. Summing up, Vice Rector Bennewitz said: “Thanks to Marvin, researchers from a variety of disciplines can now work together on complex challenges, master growing volumes of data and prepare innovative solutions to the most pressing problems of our time. As well as supporting our research, however, these resources are also strengthening our position as a University of Excellence that’s capable of competing with our peers in other countries.”

Marvin the supercomputer: facts, figures and dates

With a connected load of 430 kW, 14 racks, 320 NVIDIA GPUs and 18,400 CPU cores, Marvin is among the most powerful academic supercomputers in Germany. Two thirds of its capacity has been specifically optimized for machine learning and AI applications, something of which no other university supercomputer can boast. Marvin has already helped 495 registered users from 102 research groups since it began operating on March 11, 2024, during which time 1,022 support requests have been processed and a total of 46 courses supported. While the HPC team from University IT is responsible for Marvin’s technical operation and support, their colleagues in the HPC/A Lab serve as the primary contacts and coordinators for the researchers.

Part of the Digital Strategy

The University of Bonn’s Digital Strategy sets out the measures and structures required for its digital transformation. The Marvin project formed part of the Infrastructure for Research, Teaching and Services set of objectives.

Further information:


High Performance Computing (HPC) portal at the University of Bonn: https://www.hpc.uni-bonn.de/en1

High Performance Computing and Analytics Lab (HPC/A Lab): https://www.dice.uni-bonn.de/hpca/en/hpc-a-lab?set_language=en2

The seven finalists’ projects:
https://www.hpc.uni-bonn.de/en/community/marvins-birthday/contributions/contributions-13

 

Media contacs:

Prof. Dr. Petra Mutzel (HPC/A Lab) for research inquiries:

Director of the High Performance Computing and Analytics Lab

Phone: +49 228 73-69917

Email: petra.mutzel@cs.uni-bonn.de

Dr. Dirk Barbi (HPC/University IT) for technical inquiries:

HPC Team Lead

Phone: +49 228 73-66136

Email: dbarbi@uni-bonn.de

Supercomputer Marvin
Supercomputer Marvin - Marvin the supercomputer—one of the most powerful academic supercomputers in Germany—has been on hand to help University of Bonn researchers and their partners for a year now © Photo: Volker Lannert / Uni Bonn
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