• DocumentCode
    2625842
  • Title

    The Cactus computational collaboratory: enabling technologies for relativistic astrophysics, and a toolkit for solving PDE´s by communities in science and engineering

  • Author

    Allen, Gabrielle ; Goodale, Tom ; Seidel, Edward

  • Author_Institution
    Albert-Einstein-Inst., Max-Planck-Inst. fur Gravitationsphysik, Potsdam, Germany
  • fYear
    1999
  • fDate
    21-25 Feb 1999
  • Firstpage
    36
  • Lastpage
    41
  • Abstract
    We are developing a system for collaborative research and development for a distributed group of researchers at different institutions around the world. In a new paradigm for collaborative computational science, the computer code and supporting infrastructure itself becomes the collaborating instrument, just as an accelerator becomes the collaborating tool for large numbers of distributed researchers in particle physics, The design of this “Collaboratory” allows many users, with very different areas of expertise, to work coherently together on distributed computers around the world. Different supercomputers may be used separately, or for problems exceeding the capacity of any single system, multiple supercomputers may be networked together through high speed gigabit networks. Central to this Collaboratory is a new type of community simulation code, called “Cactus”. The scientific driving force behind this project is the simulation of Einstein´s equations for studying black holes, gravitational waves, and neutron stars, which has brought together researchers in very different fields from many groups around the world to make advances in the study of relativity and astrophysics. But the system is also being developed to provide scientists and engineers, without expert knowledge of parallel or distributed computing, mesh refinement, and so on, with a simple framework for solving any system of partial differential equations on many parallel computer systems, from traditional supercomputers to networks of workstations
  • Keywords
    astronomy computing; groupware; wide area networks; Cactus; Cactus computational collaboratory; PDE; black holes; collaborative computational science; collaborative research; community simulation code; distributed computers; gravitational waves; neutron stars; relativistic astrophysics; Collaboration; Collaborative tools; Collaborative work; Distributed computing; High energy physics instrumentation computing; Instruments; Particle accelerators; Physics computing; Research and development; Supercomputers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Frontiers of Massively Parallel Computation, 1999. Frontiers '99. The Seventh Symposium on the
  • Conference_Location
    Annapolis, MD
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-0087-0
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/FMPC.1999.750582
  • Filename
    750582