Promoting collaboration among users of high-performance computing.
Virginia Tech faculty and students from many scientific disciplines rely on
high-end computing and networking resources in order to address
otherwise intractable problems.
LASCA seeks to foster collaboration among
computer scientists and researchers from various application areas.
These collaborations are of mutual benefit:
computer science researchers make new technology available to the
applications areas, while applications researchers supply challenging
problems for testing new algorithms and systems.
LASCA's location in the ACITC is particularly strategic for these
kinds of collaborations. Closely related ACITC laboratories include
the Computing Systems Research
Lab,
the University Visualization and
Animation Group,
the Digital Library Research Laboratory,
and the Center for
Human-Computer Interaction.
LASCA participants
also include members of numerous departments and
research labs from across the Virginia Tech campus.
Educating students.
Graduate and undergraduate students
working in LASCA gain valuable experience in a
multidisciplinary setting typical of modern computational
science and engineering. In this environment,
computer science students must
understand the problems of real scientific applications,
while engineering and natural science students learn how to
identify and apply appropriate computing resources and expertise.
A portal to world-class high-performance computing resources and research.
LASCA is working to build a community of users around Virginia Tech's
Terascale Computing Facility
(TCF).
The TCF's System X cluster is currently the world's most powerful university
supercomputer, and the third most powerful overall.
LASCA faculty and students are actively supporting algorithm and code
development for this resource.
The laboratory also serves as a contact point between Virginia Tech
and computing resources and expertise
available
at US government laboratories and high performance computing centers.
For example,
LASCA faculty are involved in collaborations with Oak
Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL),
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL),
NASA, and
NIH.
LASCA is also leading Virginia Tech's participation in the emerging computational
grid, by helping to implement a campus-wide grid, and by participating
in the Global Grid Forum.