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February 22, 1999
The U.S. Department of Energy today announced a new policy of broader
scientific peer review for the use of its largest unclassified scientific
computing facility, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing
Center (NERSC). To advance the role of computing in DOE's scientific
research programs, the department will also establish a new Policy
Board to help chart the future of the facility.
The scientific computing center, currently home to seven SGI/Cray
supercomputers, is located at the department's Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory, Berkeley, Calif., and serves about 2,500 researchers
at national laboratories, universities and in industry.
"With the recent announcement of the President's proposed $366
million initiative to boost long-term computational science and
information technology, it's important to begin laying a strong
foundation for those programs," said Under Secretary of Energy Ernest
Moniz. "This new policy for allocating time on our supercomputers
will help do just that by using the computers most effectively,
as well as making computing a more integral part of how we solve
the nation's important scientific problems."
The new policy will help ensure that NERSC becomes a national
leader in using high performance computing as a tool for scientific
discovery, just as DOE's light sources and particle accelerators
are national and international leaders in their areas. As proposals
are submitted, they will be subjected to peer review to evaluate:
the quality of science; how well the proposed research is aligned
with the mission of DOE's Office of Science; and the readiness of
the specific application and applicant to fully utilize the computing
resources being requested.
"Computing is becoming a new kind of tool for scientific discovery,"
said Berkeley Lab Director Charles V. Shank. "We want to ensure
that we're getting the best science out of the facility, so we benchmarked
how NERSC is managed vis-a-vis other national user facilities operated
by DOE. This change is really part of our efforts to reinvent NERSC
to better meet the nation's scientific computing needs."
The new approach combines guidelines from DOE, guidance from a
policy board and peer review by scientists. The change reflects
the ever-broadening role of NERSC since it was founded in 1974 to
provide computing resources for magnetic fusion research. Since
then, the facility has expanded its scope to include high-energy
physics, materials science, computational biology, astrophysics,
energy research, chemistry and climate modeling. In 1995, DOE began
a process to change the supercomputing center from one which merely
provided computing time to researchers to a center with intellectual
resources to help scientists find newer and better ways to integrate
scientific computing into their research efforts.
The NERSC Program Advisory Committee will be responsible for the
new scientific peer review process for proposals to access the facility's
computers. This new process will be used to allocate 40 percent
of NERSC's computing resources. The peer review and resource allocation
process for the remaining 60 percent of NERSC's computing resources
will be managed directly by the programs in the department's Office
of Science, reflecting their mission priorities.
Because DOE is a mission agency charged with carrying out specific
programs related to national needs, the majority of NERSC's resources
will be focused on large-scale computational science programs. This
research includes DOE's Grand Challenge projects in: understanding
magnetic materials, with applications in computer data storage and
power generation (this project won the 1998 Gordon Bell Prize);
designing advanced particle accelerators; and understanding the
chemistry of elements such as uranium to enable more effective cleanup
of contaminated DOE sites.
The new policy is also expected to foster "start-up" or special
projects that show promise. These are one-time allocations aimed
at helping new projects get started, with a goal of applying for
more time on NERSC's computers the following fiscal year.
To provide overall policy direction to the center and to help
chart its future, Berkeley Lab will establish a NERSC Policy Board.
The board will report directly to Lab Director Shank. This approach
follows that of other major DOE facilities. Similarly, a national
user group will advise NERSC on the current and future delivery
of center resources and services.
More information on NERSC is available at http://www.nersc.gov. More information on NERSC's new allocations
policy can be found on the web at: http://home.nersc.gov/accounts/allocations/alloc2000/
. Berkeley Lab
( http://www.lbl.gov )
conducts unclassified research and is managed by the University
of California. Information on the department's role in the Information
Technology for the Twenty-First Century Initiative is available
at http://www.er.doe.gov/ssi.
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