Photo: Francisco Guerrero
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Subsurface Seer: Repsol’s Francisco Ortigosa inside the glass
box that houses the MareNostrum supercomputer
in Barcelona, Spain.
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Geophysics
Sunlight filters through the stained-glass windows as
Francisco Ortigosa wanders around the Torre Girona
chapel, his eyes taking in all the details. And what
details they are: there are the thick beige stone walls,
the Romanesque arches, the ornately carved wooden doors,
and the sleek black cabinets housing the massively
parallel supercomputer.
Yep, this is no ordinary chapel. Situated on the
campus of the Technical University of Catalonia, in
Barcelona, Spain, this chapel has been converted into
the world’s most beautiful server room. It houses
MareNostrum, the third most powerful supercomputer in
Europe. The place is still inspiring, but these days
visitors like Ortigosa come here for enlightenment not
on spiritual matters but rather on the leading edge of
high-performance computing.
Ortigosa is the director of geophysics at Repsol YPF,
the Spanish oil giant. He heads an ambitious—and
potentially stunningly lucrative—geophysical
supercomputing initiative dubbed the Kaleidoscope
Project. The goal of the project is to develop an
entirely new class of seismic-imaging codes—the computer
algorithms that transform raw seismic data into useful,
detail-rich images of the Earth, kilometers below its
surface. Ortigosa hopes those images will reveal oil and
gas reservoirs that current codes can’t uncover.
Kaleidoscope will more fully unleash the power of
supercomputers like MareNostrum, which was built by IBM
and has 2560 computing nodes and a peak performance of
94.21 trillion floating-point operations per second
(teraflops). Today’s most advanced seismic codes create
color-coded three-dimensional maps of the subsurface
realm by solving a mathematical construct known as the
one-way wave equation, which describes seismic waves
traveling in just one direction. But Kaleidoscope codes
will solve the two-way wave equation, greatly improving
the level of detail by taking into account waves
propagating in multiple directions.
Repsol, based in Madrid, plans to use the new
technology to locate hydrocarbons buried kilometers
below the seafloor in the Gulf of Mexico—and below more
than 2500 meters of ocean. That’s what oil companies
call ultradeep water, and it’s the new frontier in
petroleum exploration. Codes based on the one-way wave
equation can’t accurately image the thick bodies of salt
that typically trap hydrocarbons so far down. Repsol’s
geophysicists are confident that two-way wave equation
codes will overcome this limitation, allowing them to
search for oil under 10 kilometers of sediment and hard
rock where the salt bodies and underlying oil hide.
“Seismic imaging today uses lots of approximations,”
Ortigosa says. “Our codes will create a closer
representation of the actual physics of the Earth. We’re
not taking shortcuts.”
To carry out its plan, Repsol recruited two partners:
3DGeo, a seismic software firm headquartered in Santa
Clara, Calif., and the Barcelona Supercomputing Center
(BSC), which operates MareNostrum. The American
geophysicists are developing the codes to solve the
two-way wave equation, and the Spanish computer
scientists are figuring out how to run the codes
efficiently on supercomputers—MareNostrum in the
immediate future and later on a BSC system based on the
Cell processor, the powerful number-crunching chip
developed jointly by IBM, Sony, and Toshiba.
Geophysicists have been chasing the holy grail of the
two-way wave equation for years. The problem is that to
even think about solving it required more than 10 times
the computing power and around 100 times the data
storage capacity than was typical of available
supercomputers. But more recently, rising processing
power and oil prices have conspired to at last put the
solution within reach.
And it’s happening not a moment too soon. In the Gulf
of Mexico, for example, most of the hydrocarbon reserves
in the relatively shallow shelf waters have been
drained. The easy oil is gone. But in deep waters
there’s plenty left: at least 56 billion barrels of oil
equivalent—a measure that includes oil and natural
gas—which at US $90 a barrel would fetch about $5
trillion and meet the entire U.S. demand for oil and gas
for five years. The catch is that finding oil at such
depths is extremely challenging and hugely expensive.