Workshop Offered on DOE Computational Software
released 05.13.03
BERKELEY, CA
The U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is hosting a four-day workshop on the DOE Advanced CompuTational Software (ACTS) Collection, a set of software tools aimed at simplifying the solution of common and important computational problems. The workshop will be Aug. 5-8 in Berkeley.
Developed mainly at DOE national laboratories, the DOE ACTS Collection has substantially benefited a wide range of scientific codes and industrial applications, enabling previously impossible computation.
DOE will sponsor a limited number of graduate students and postdoctoral fellows to participate in the workshop. This support includes round-trip transportation to and from Berkeley, local transportation, lodging, meals and workshop materials. Applications from other research scientists are also encouraged.
The four-day workshop will present an introduction to the ACTS Collection for application scientists whose research requires either large amounts of computation, a large volume of data manipulation, the use of robust numerical algorithms, or combinations of these. The workshop will include a range of tutorials on the tools (both those currently available in the collection and some deliverables from the DOE SciDAC program), discussion sessions aimed at solving specific computational needs by the participants, and hands-on practices using high performance computers at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing (NERSC) Center.
The workshop will consist of parallel sessions with tutorials grouped by the following topics:
- Direct and iterative methods for the solution of linear and nonlinear systems of equations
- PDE's and multilevel methods
- Numerical optimization
- Structured and unstructured meshes (generation, manipulation and computation)
- Development of high-performance computing applications
- Performance monitoring and tuning
- Grid computing
The deadline for applications is June 9. The application form can be found at http://acts.nersc.gov/events/Workshop2003/application.html.
Students and postdoctoral fellows should submit an abstract describing the nature of their work, future plans and/or current needs for computation. A letter of recommendation from the applicant's supervisor also needs to be provided using the online form at http://acts.nersc.gov/events/Workshop2003/recommendation.html. The recommendation letter must also arrive no later than June 9.
Other applicants must submit a letter outlining their current work and future plans and needs for computational resources with a list of publications.
For more information on the workshop, contact Tony Drummond at (510) 486-7624 or Osni Marques at (510) 486-5290. For more information about the ACTS Collection, visit http://acts.nersc.gov/.