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2008 INCITE Awards Announced
2008 supercomputing allocations were announced under DOE's Innovative and Novel Computational Impact on Theory and Experiment (INCITE) program, which supports computationally intensive, large-scale research projects. The 55 projects were together awarded 265 million processor-hours at ASCR’s Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee and the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, and the Biological and Environmental Research program’s Molecular Science Computing Facility at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Washington.
Of the 31 new and 24 renewal projects selected, eight were from industry, 17 from universities and 20 from DOE labs as well as other public, private and international researchers. These awards will allow cutting-edge research to be carried out in weeks or months, rather than years or decades, by allowing scientists access to some of the world’s most powerful supercomputers at DOE national laboratories. The projects are expected to impact a wide array of scientific areas including: Energy, including cleaner-burning coal, designing advanced systems for fusion energy and nuclear power, and improving combustion to increase efficiency and reduce emissions; Biology, such as studying the causes of Parkinson’s disease, simulating electrical activity in the heart, and understanding protein membranes; Climate change, including improving climate models, studying the effects of turbulence in oceans, and simulating clouds on a global scale; and Astrophysics, such as modeling supernova explosions and simulating black holes. 2008 INCITE Awards... ( 168kb PDF file) DOE Press Release...
The next round for INCITE competition will be announced this summer. Expansion of the DOE Office of Science’s computational capabilities should approximately quadruple the 2009 INCITE award allocations to close to a billion processor hours. This opportunity, available to all on a competitive basis, will lead to scientific discovery on an unprecedented scale.
The Vision and Supercomputers Powering
the DOE Office of Science's INCITE Program
Over the past 30 years, the Department of Energy’s (DOE) supercomputing program has played an increasingly important role in scientific research by allowing scientists to create more accurate models of complex processes, simulate problems once thought to be impossible, and to analyze the increasing amount of data generated by experiments. To help the research communities fully tap into the capabilities of current and future supercomputers, Under Secretary for Science Raymond Orbach launched the Innovative and Novel Computational Impact on Theory and Experiment (INCITE) program in 2003. The INCITE program was conceived specifically to seek out computationally intensive, large-scale research projects with the potential to significantly advance key areas in science and engineering. The program encourages proposals from universities, other research institutions and industry.
To advance scientific discovery, DOE supports a portfolio of national high performance computing facilities housing some of the most advanced supercomputers. In November 2006, five of the computers at these facilities were ranked within the top 10 on the TOP500 list of the world’s fastest supercomputers. Four of the five DOE computers on the TOP500 list support the Stockpile Stewardship Program within DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). NNSA uses these classified supercomputers at Lawrence Livermore, Los Alamos and Sandia National Laboratories to assess the safety and reliability of the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile.
But the INCITE program goes beyond providing access to supercomputers. A key aspect of the program is to connect leaders of the projects with scientific and technical staff at the computing facilities. These staff, who are often scientists with a strong interest in computing, work closely with INCITE researchers to maximize the scientific output from the computer runs.
Since 1974, DOE’s Office of Science, the single nation’s largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences, has provided supercomputing resources for unclassified research through the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. During the first two years of the INCITE program, 10 percent of the resources at NERSC were allocated to INCITE awardees. However, demand for supercomputing resources far exceeded available systems and in 2003, the Office of Science identified increasing computing capability by a factor of 100 as the second priority on its Facilities of the Future list. The goal was to establish Leadership Class Computing resources to support open science. As a result of a peer-reviewed competition, the first Leadership Computing facility was established at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in 2004. A second Leadership Computing facility was established at Argonne National Laboratory in 2006. This expansion of computational resources led to a corresponding expansion of the INCITE program. In 2007, Argonne, Lawrence Berkeley, Oak Ridge and Pacific Northwest national laboratories all provided resources for the INCITE program.
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