Provided below is a listing of relevant articles, plans and ASCR-sponsored workshop reports.
(214KB)Summary of Data Requirements for NERSC
Department of Energy Scientists represented by the NERSC user community have growing requirements for data storage, I/O bandwidth, networking bandwidth, and data software and services. Over the next five years, these requirements are well above what would be provided by increases that follow historical trends. This report focuses primarily on the data needs of the modeling and simulation community.
(2.1MB)ASCAC Subcommittee Report: The Opportunities and Challenges of Exascale Computing
Computational modeling, simulation, prediction, and control at exascale offer the prospect of transformative progress in energy, national security, the environment, and our economy, and for fundamental scientific questions. Although the path to exascale necessarily involves numerous complex challenges, the almost-certain benefits far outweigh the costs.
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OS/R Report
Link to the report...
(2.8MB)
Architectures II Workshop Report
Link to the report...
(1.6MB)
Exascale Tools Workshop Report
Link to the report...
(1.2MB)
Geant4 Workshop
Link to the report...
(1.6MB)
DOE Workshop Report on Multiphysics Simulations
“Multiphysics Simulations: Challenges and Opportunities” considers multiphysics applications from algorithmic and architectural perspectives, where "algorithmic" includes both mathematical analysis and computational complexity and "architectural" includes both software and hardware environments. Many diverse multiphysics applications can be reduced, en route to their computational simulation, to a common algebraic coupling paradigm. Mathematical analysis of multiphysics coupling in this form is not always practical for realistic applications, but model problems representative of applications discussed herein can provide insight. A variety of software frameworks for multiphysics applications have been constructed and refined within disciplinary communities and executed on leading-edge computer systems. It examines several of these, exposes some commonalities among them, and attempts to extrapolate best practices to future systems. Get report: http://www.ipd.anl.gov/anlpubs/2012/01/72183.pdf![External link](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/web/20130219051946im_/http://science.energy.gov/styles/images/mime-types/external-small.png)
(1.0MB)Report of the ASCR/BES Data Workshop 2011
(1.3MB)Report of the Extreme Scale Solvers Workshop, March 8-9, 2012
Transition to Future Architectures
(2.1MB)Magellan Report Cuts Through Cloud Computing Hype
The Recovery Act funded Magellan project documents the pros and cons of scientific usage of cloud computing in their final report. Within a few weeks industry press and blogs from around the world took notice.
(628KB)Report of the DOE Workshop on Mathematics for the Analysis, Simulation, and Optimization of Complex Systems September 13–14, 2011
A Multifaceted Mathematical Approach for Complex Systems
(10.2MB)Scientific Collaborations for Extreme-Scale Science Workshop Report
Scientific Collaborations for Extreme-Scale Science Workshop Report Extreme‐scale science is not simply about facilities. It inevitably also requires the exponential acceleration of progress that can be achieved when many differing intellects attack challenges collaboratively. The Scientific Collaborations for Extreme‐Scale Science Workshop, held December 6–7, 2011 in Gaithersburg, Maryland, focused on a strategic vision of how collaboration can be enabled, and on the research and development that will turn the vision into reality.
(6.0MB)Exascale Programming Challenges Workshop Report
The workshop for programming models, languages, compilers and runtime systems for exascale machines was held in July, 2011. The goal was to identify the challenges in each of these areas, the promising approaches, and measures to assess progress. The participants in the workshop articulated the research challenges in programming support for anticipated exascale systems, including specifying what is known and what remains uncertain.
(1.0MB)Exascale Workshop on Data Analysis, Management, and Visualization
The workshop goal was to identify the research and production directions that the Data Management, Analysis, and Visualization (DMAV) community must take to enable scientific discovery for HPC as it approaches the exascale.
(1.0MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Cross-Cutting Technologies for Computing at the Exascale Workshop
The Cross-cutting Technologies for Computing at the Exascale workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of workshops. The workshop took place February 2-4, 2010 in Washington, DC.
(4.9MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Architectures and Technology for Extreme Scale Computing
The Architectures and Technology workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of workshops. The workshop took place December 8-10, 2009 in San Diego, CA.
(1.4MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Discovery in Basic Energy Sciences: The Role of Computing at the Extreme Scale
The BES workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of workshops. The workshop took place August 13-15, 2009 in Washington D.C.
(1.5MB)Workshop on Computational Science and Chemistry for Innovation
The workshop was held July 26-27, 2010 in Bethesda MD to assess the potential of state-of-the-art computer simulations to accelerate understanding and discovery in materials science and chemistry, with a focus on potential impacts in energy technologies and innovation.
(2.1MB)The NNSA workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of workshops. This workshop was held October 6-8, 2009 in Washington D.C.
(587KB)Workshop report from a panel of 12 scientists and engineers with experience in government, universities, national labs and industry. The panel met January 2010 in Washington, D.C. to review reports prepared to document the need for a new generation of extreme-computing capability for the DOE's missions.
(9.2MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Fusion Energy Sciences and the Role of Computing at the Extreme Scale
Fusion Energy Workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of Workshops that took place in Washington, DC, March 18-20, 2009.
(2.5MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Opportunities in Biology at the Extreme Scale of Computing
Workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of Workshops that took place in Chicago, IL, August 17-19, 2009.
(2.3MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Challenges for the Understanding the Quantum Universe and the Role of Computing at the Extreme Scale
Workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of Workshops that took place at SLAC in Menlo Park, CA, December 9-11, 2008.
(3.6MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Forefront Questions in Nuclear Science and the Role of Computing at the Extreme Scale
Workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of Workshops that took place in Washington DC, January 26-28, 2009.
International Exascale Software Project - A Roadmap
(2.1MB)Modeling, Simulation and Analysis of Complex Networked Systems: A Program Plan
This white paper outlines plans for an aggressive new research program designed to accelerate the advancement of the scientific basis for complex networked systems of importance to the DOE.
(2.7MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Science Based Nuclear Energy Systems Enabled by Advanced Modeling and Simulation at the Extreme Scale
Workshop report from the Grand Challenges Series of Workshops that took place in Washington DC May 11-12, 2009.
(4.1MB)Scientific Grand Challenges: Challenges in Climate Change Science and the Role of Computing at the Extreme Scale
Final report from the first of the Grand Challenges Series of Workshops that took place in Washington DC November 6-7, 2008.
(57KB)Workshop on Computer Science/Applied Math Institutes and High Risk / High Payoff Technologies for Applications
The workshop focused on two aspects or tracks. One was how the Applied Mathematics and Computer Science communities could help make potential high risk/high payoff areas in their application domains a reality. Since the concept of joint math and CS institutes is a a new one, the second track focused on how the community's could create, develop, and manage joint CS/Math Institutes.
(219KB)MidRange Computing in Support of Science at Office of Science Labs
A report containing the summary of the status of midrange computing efforts at the ten Office of Science Laboratories.
(617KB)A Scientific Research & Development Approach to Cyber Security
A community of scientists, technical experts and executives from DOE National Labs, universities, other Federal agencies and industry collaborated to develop a science-based, systems level case for a new, transformational approach to cyber security. The report identifies and analyzes R&D opportunities from that systems-level perspective.
(2.4MB)National Science and Technology Council - Federal Plan for Advanced Networking Research and Development
Report by the Interagency Task Force on Advanced Networking Research and Development.
(1.3MB)Report of The Panel on Recent Significant Advancements in Computational Science
A report from a distinguished panel charged with identifying recent breakthroughs in computational science and enabling technologies, supported by ASCR through the INCITE program, the SciDAC program, and/or its base program.
SciDAC Review
Link to The SciDAC Review. The SciDAC Review is a quarterly magazine that shares SciDAC projects, news, and achievements.
Supercomputing: The New Secret Weapon
Supercomputing is doing everything from designing high performance bathing suites for Olympic swimmers to developing plants that can cope with all types of environmental problems.
(1.4MB)Applied Mathematics at the U.S. Department of Energy: Past, Present and a view to the Future
A report by an independent panel from the Applied Mathematics research community.
(583KB)Mathematics for Analysis of Petascale Data Workshop Report
The workshop engaged mathematical scientists and applications researchers to identify the next-generation mathematical techniques needed to meet the challenges posed by petascale data.
(397KB)Workshop Report on Advanced Networking for Distributed Petascale Science: R&D Challenges and Opportunities
The workshop brought together leading network researchers in optical transport, middleware, and high-performance protocols. Their charge was to develop a high-level roadmap for the network research and development (R&D) that will be required to support DOE's distributed Petascale science over the next decade.
(6.6MB)Scientific Impacts and Opportunities in Computing Workshop Report
This workshop was conducted for the Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research to identify high impact opportunities in computing for investment in research to maintain the nation's preeminence in scientific discovery and competitiveness.
(3.5MB)Modeling and Simulation at the Exascale for Energy and the Environment Town Hall Meetings Report
The objective of this ten-year vision is to focus the computational science experiences gained over the past ten years on the opportunities introduced with exascale computing to revolutionize our approaches to energy, environmental sustainability and security global challenges. For more information, see the ASCR
Scientific Grand Challenges web page.
(1.9MB)Computational Research Needs in Alternative and Renewable Energy
Final report from the workshop on Computational Research Needs in Alternative and Renewable Energy held in Rockville, Maryland September 19 and 20, 2007.
(4.8MB)SciDAC Highlighted in CTWatch
The articles of this issue of CTWatch Quarterly described the connection between scalable software technology and breakthrough science. Each article offers an informative and stimulating discussion of some of the major work being carried out by one of the Centers for Enabling Technologies (CET) of the Department of Energy's wide ranging and influential SciDAC program.
(476KB)Advanced Scientific Computing Research: Delivering Computing for the Frontiers of Science - Facilities Division Strategic Plan for High Performance Computing Resources
The strategic vision for High Performance Computing (HPC) resources in the Facilities Division of the Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) program in the Department of Energy's Office of Science for the next 10 years.
(868KB)Visualization and Knowledge Discovery: Report from the DOE/ASCR Workshop on Visual Analysis and Data Exploration at Extreme Scale
The developed visualization and data exploration tools have served admirably with gigabyte and even terabyte datasets, but at the peta- and exascale levels, those tools will no longer suffice. Scientists and researchers met under the auspices of ASCR in Salt Lake City on June 7-8, 2007 to discuss the coming "data tsunami" and issues involved in data exploration, data understanding, and data visualization at the petascale and beyond.
(214KB)Software Development Tools for Petascale Computing Workshop
The findings generated at the Software Development Tools for PetaScale Computing (SDTPC) Workshop held in Washington, D.C. on August 1 and 2, 2007 are in this final report.
(1.3MB)Final Report from the Cyber Security Research Needs for Open Science
These are the results of Priority Research Directions (PRDs) identified during the two-day workshop held on July 23 & 24, 2007. The workshop was jointly sponsored by the DOE Office of Science and Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability. Participation included representation from national labs, higher education and industry. Participants self-identified their interests into five break-out groups, each of which was charged with identifying PRDs.
(2.0MB)Computational Subsurface Sciences Workshop Report
The workshop, held in Bethesda, Maryland, January 9-12, 2007 was to obtain community input on computational science research needs and opportunities in the subsurface sciences and related areas, with a focus on developing a next generation of numerical models of subsurface flow and process simulation. Collaborating DOE offices were SC, EM, FE, and RW.
(758KB)Multiscale Mathematics Initiative: A Roadmap
This was the third of three DOE sponsored workshops. It was held in Portland, Oregon September 21-23, 2004, to consider the scientific needs and mathematical challenges for multiscale simulation. This report represents the important conclusions, themes and recommendations for DOE investments from all three workshops.
(641KB)Final Report Second DOE Workshop on Multiscale Problems
The Second DOE Workshop on Multiscale Problems was held from July 20 to July 22, 2004 in Broomfield, Colorado. During these three days, over eighty researchers with expertise in a wide variety of engineering, mathematical and scientific fields gathered to discuss the current state of mathematical methods for multiscale problems, possible future directions for research, and ways in which the Department of Energy could best support such activity.
(497KB)Report of the First Multiscale Mathematics Workshop: First Steps toward a Roadmap
Some of the nation's leading computational scientists gathered in Washington, D.C. May 3-5, 2004 to consider the scientific needs and mathematical challenges for multiscale simulation. The goals were to (1) identify the most compelling scientific applications facing major roadblocks due to multiscale modeling needs and (2) formulate a strategic plan for investment in multiscale mathematics research that will meet these needs.
(222KB)Report on the Mathematical Research Challenges in Optimization of Complex Systems
The goal of the workshop was to articulate opportunities for mathematical research relevant to DOE applied science and technology programs, in mathematical areas that are not already a major part of the DOE applied mathematics research portfolio.
(2.7MB)Report on the Workshop on Simulation and Modeling for Advanced Nuclear Energy Systems
DOE's Office of Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) and Nuclear Energy (NE) co-sponsored a workshop to identify the research opportunities and priorities for advancing the use of simulation and modeling in the research and development of advanced nuclear energy.
(155KB)Management Model for Delivering High Performance and Leadership Class Computing Systems for Scientific Discovery
The purpose of this document is to describe a model for managing the activities and tasks associated with the operation of High Performance Computing Facilities (HPCF) that enable scientific discovery as well as the delivery of next generation High Performance Production Computing (HPPC) and Leadership Class Computing (LCC) resources to the HPCF to meet established cost, schedule and performance objectives. December 2006
(1.2MB)Data-Management Challenge
The DOE Office of Science Data-Management Workshops were held March-May 2004. A number of application scientists and computer scientists at these meetings came to the conclusion that the plan as presented was dangerously light on attention to data management, given the increasingly data-intensive nature of research supported by the Office of Science. This report documents these workshops.
(2.0MB)Guide to the NITRD
Supplement to the President's Budget for FY05 for the Networking and Information Technology Research and Development (NITRD) Program. Prepared by the Interagency Working Group on Information Technology Research and Development of the National Science and Technology Council, the Supplement describes accomplishments and proposed activities of the Federal agencies that work collaboratively on R&D in advanced computing, networking, software, and related information technologies to support Federal missions and help maintain U.S. leadership in cutting-edge science, engineering, and technology.
(455KB)Federal Plan for High-End Computing
Report of the High-End Computing Revitalization Task Force.