Technologies for the 21st Century
CIC Research Facilities
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- Overview
- NSF
- NASA
- DOE
- NIH
- NOAA
- EPA


Overview

To foster technical research and demonstrate future directions of CIC R&D, Federal agencies operate numerous CIC research facilities across the country. These facilities provide capabilities to (1) evaluate early prototype systems and provide valuable feedback to developers, (2) integrate visualization and virtual reality systems into existing high performance systems, (3) run full scale applications on systems not otherwise available, and (4) develop parallel software using scaled down systems. These facilities provide access to innovations in network connectivity that allow large scale applications to run over remote connections.
 
The success of these research centers is attributed to many enabling technologies, such as high speed networks, supercomputers, parallel architectures, massive data stores, and virtual reality display devices, and to the dedication of researchers, facility staff, hardware and software vendors, and industrial affiliates. All facilities provide extensive K-12 and undergraduate educational opportunities, as well as training for researchers, graduate students, and faculty, and are ideal benchmarking sites for both systems and applications.
 
Funding for these facilities, primarily provided by CIC R&D agencies, is leveraged heavily through equipment and personnel from hardware and software vendors, discipline-specific agency funds, as well as state and local funds, and industrial affiliate contributions, offering a low risk, collaborative environment for exploring and ultimately exploiting CIC R&D technology. Below is a list of CIC R&D research facilities categorized by the primary funding agency.



NSF

Supercomputing centers (through FY 1998)

- Cornell Theory center (CTC), Ithaca, NY
- National center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), Urbana-Champaign, IL
- Pittsburgh Supercomputing center (PSC), Pittsburgh, PA
- San Diego Supercomputing center (SDSC), San Diego, CA
- National center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), Boulder, CO

PACI centers -- The NSF Partnerships for Advanced Computational Infrastructure Program (beginning in FY 1998) builds on and replaces the current NSF Supercomputer centers Program established in 1985 and focuses on taking advantage of newly emerging opportunities in high performance computing and communications.

- National Computational Science Alliance (NCSA), Urbana-Champaign, IL
- National Partnership for Advanced Computational Infrastructure (NPACI), San Diego, CA

Science & Technology centers

- center for Cognitive Science, University of Pennsylvania
- center for Computer Graphics and Scientific Visualization, University of Utah
- center for Research in Parallel Computation (CRPC), Rice University



NASA

Testbeds

- Ames Research center, Moffett Field, CA
- Goddard Space Flight center, Greenbelt, MD
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA
- Langley Research center, Langley, VA
- Lewis Research center, Cleveland, OH



DOE

Laboratories

- Argonne National Laboratory, Chicago, IL
- Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
- National Energy Research Supercomputer center at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA
- Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN



NIH

Systems

- Frederick Biomedical Supercomputing center at the National Cancer Institute
- Supercomputing Resources at the Division of Computer Research and Technology

National center for Research Resources'
High Performance Computing Resource centers


- Biomedical Computation Resource, University of California, San Diego
- Parallel Computing Resource for Structural Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- Parallel Processing Resource for Biomedical Scientists, Cornell Theory center, Cornell University
- Resource for Concurrent Biological Computing, Beckman Institute, University of Illinois
- Supercomputing for Biomedical Research, Pittsburgh Supercomputing center
- Theoretical Simulation of Biological Systems, Columbia University

National center for Research Resources'
Scientific Visualization Resource centers


- Interactive Graphics for Molecular Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- Special Research Resource for Biomolecular Graphics, University of California, San Francisco



NOAA

Laboratories

- Forecast Systems Laboratory, Boulder, CO
- Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, NJ
- National centers for Environmental Prediction, Camp Springs, MD



EPA

Systems

- National Environmental Supercomputing center, Bay City, MI

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