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Overview

E-Science: Achievements, Challenges and new Opportunities Supercomputing ‘06 UK e-Science Stand Malcolm Atkinson Director e-Science Institute & e-Science Envoy www.nesc.ac.uk 13 th November 2006. Overview. Celebrate Five Years of Success Three Great Strengths Established Welcome New Projects

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Overview

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  1. E-Science: Achievements, Challenges and new OpportunitiesSupercomputing ‘06UK e-Science StandMalcolm AtkinsonDirector e-Science Institute& e-Science Envoywww.nesc.ac.uk13th November 2006

  2. Overview • Celebrate Five Years of Success • Three Great Strengths Established • Welcome New Projects • E-Science: Systematic Support for Collaborative Research • Multi-disciplinary, Multi-Site & Multi-National • All disciplines contribute & benefit • Enabling wider engagement • Building with advances in Computing Science

  3. Commitment to e-Infrastructure • A shared resource • That enables science, research, engineering, medicine, industry, … • It will improve UK / European / … productivity • Lisbon Accord 2000 • e-Science Vision SR2000 – John Taylor • Commitment by UK government • Sections 2.23-2.25 • Always there • c.f. telephones, transport, power

  4. UK e-Science Success • Thriving Community • All disciplines & all Research Councils • Industry & Academia • Many universities & research institutes • UK e-Science All Hands Meetings • Productive collaboration

  5. Workshop 1: Kyra Norman and Orchestra Cube; Photo: Rob Bristow, June 2006 Slide: Angela Piccini

  6. Aberdeen University of Manchester University of Essex Lancaster Leeds Manchester Nottingham Oxford Colchester London Bristol National Centre for e-Social Science

  7. e-Science Institute Edinburgh We are here Themes Workshops Visitors Summer Schools

  8. The Primary Requirement … Encouraging People to Work Together on Challenges: Science, Engineering & Medicine

  9. All Hands Meetings

  10. In Real Time Scientific Information Scientific Discovery Service Workflow Real Time Data Integration Discovery Services Literature Operational Data Instrument Data Databases Dynamic Application Integration Integrative Knowledge Management Using GRID Resources Images UK e-Science Success • Significant outputs from projects • Research results • Commercial impact • Outreach and international influence

  11. DAME http://www.cs.york.ac.uk/dame/ Aircraft healthcare diagnosis • Aims to manage >1Tb per year of Aero Engine vibration and maintenance data. • Interlinks with search and reasoning services. • Defined and evaluated a distributed search system. • GSI enabled secure engine performance simulation • CBR advisor for diagnostic engineer • A data architecture defined based on Globus and SRB. • BROADEN DTI Project (£3.9M) • Spun out technology exploited through Cybula Ltd., Oxford Biosignals and DS&S. • Successful mid-term demonstrator well received by Rolls Royce • White Rose Grid: experience of building & using production Grids • In Grid Blue Print 2 edition 2 • Jim Austin (Comp Sci, York) • 4 Universities and institutes • 3 Companies

  12. climateprediction.netUsers Worldwide>300,000 users total (90% MS Windows): >60,000 active~17 million model-years simulated (as of September '06)~180,000 completed simulations The world's largest climate modelling supercomputer! (NB: a black dot is one or more computers running climateprediction.net)

  13. UK e-Science Success • Reliable e-Infrastructure 24*7 • Foundations well established • Extending in Function, Scale & Ubiquity • NGS • E-Science Centres • Specialised support centres • AHRC Support @ Kings, Text Mining, 2*NERC centres, NCeSS • Data Services • OMII-UK • E-Science Institute • DCC • JISC Virtual Research Environments • JISC e-Framework

  14. Edinburgh York Lancaster Leeds Manchester Sheffield CCLRC Daresbury CCLRC RAL Cardiff London Bristol National Grid Service and partners

  15. Coordination & Leadership: NeSC & e-Science Directors’ Forum e-Science Centres in the UK e-Science Centres Digital Curation Centre e-Science Centres of Excellence Other centres Glasgow Edinburgh Access Grid Support Centre Lancaster Belfast Newcastle National Centre for Text Mining National Institute for Environmental e-Science Manchester Leicester York National Centre for e-Social Science Leeds Sheffield Cambridge National Grid Service CCLRC Daresbury CCLRC RAL Birmingham Oxford London Cardiff London Reading Open Middleware Infrastructure Institute Bristol Southampton

  16. University of Manchester EPCC National e-Science Centre Edinburgh Manchester School of Electronics and Computer Science University of Southampton Southampton OMII-UK nodes

  17. Software • Provide guidance to the broad UK e-Science community • Disseminate your e-Science software to a global community Support • Software support and training in using e-Science software • Provide collaborative mechanisms to support the community • Define, contribute and disseminate best practice and standards Sustainability • Provide a best of breed software solution • Partner to provide a sustainable future. ‘software and support to enable a sustained future for the UK e-Science community and its international collaborators’

  18. Database Research Group, School of Informatics AHRC Research Centre for Studies in Intellectual Property and Technology Law EDINA National e-Science Centre Humanities Advanced Technology and Information Institute Edinburgh Glasgow Rutherford Appleton and Daresbury Laboratories CCLRC Daresbury UKOLN (formerly UK Office for Library Networking) CCLRC RAL Bath Digital Curation Centre and partners

  19. Projects: Pioneering methods Demonstrating results Infecting academia & Industry e-Infrastructure: Delivering Resources & Services Connecting & SupportingCommunities Enthusiastic researchers, Many interacting communities & Breadth Three Strengths MutualDependence& Growth

  20. Three New EPSRC Projects CARMEN • Understanding the brain – £4.5m – led by Professor Colin Ingram, University of Newcastle upon Tyne neurone 1 neurone 2 neurone 3

  21. Geometry variation Strain variation Device Circuit Vout2 [V] Strain OPC malfunctioning variability Vout1 [V] Layout induced variability Technology - design link Atomistic variability Statistical and novel design Three New EPSRC Projects NanoCMOSGrid • Designing nano-circuits – £5.2m – led by Professor Asen Asenov at Glasgow University

  22. Three New EPSRC Projects PMESG (Pervasive Mobile Environmental Sensor Grids) project • Environmental impact of traffic • Jointly funded with the Department for Transport the Department for Transport • £3.5m – led by Professor John Polak at Imperial College

  23. Opportunities • Shape Future e-Infrastructure • Balance international & local requirements • Embrace diversity & maintain consistency • Integrate effort & resources • Exploit e-Science methods • To do new research • Using e-Infrastructure • Embed in Educational Programmes • Creativity & energy of the young • Engage Industry & Commerce

  24. We're on the Map Now map our future Thanks to: Those who made UK e-Science happen. Carole Goble, Neil Geddes, Steven Newhouse, Jo Newman & Chris Rusbridge for slides. Alison McCall & Carol Becker for pictures.

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