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| Awards from 2007 - present |
| Awards from 2006 & earlier |
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2006
- A team of scientists and engineers from Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Texas, the University of California, Davis, and Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center won the Analytics Challenge Award at SC06 for their work using PSC's Cray XT3 to realistically simulate earthquake ground motion and thereby better assess the seismic hazard to populated earthquake basins. SC06 is the 2006 international conference of high-performance computing, networking, data storage and analysis.
The award-winning project was officially titled “Remote Runtime Steering of Integrated Terascale Simulation and Visualization.” The full team comprised Hongfeng Yu, University of California, Davis (technical lead); Tiankai Tu, Carnegie Mellon (team lead); Jacobo Bielak, Carnegie Mellon; Omar Ghattas, University of Texas at Austin; Julio C. Lopez, Carnegie Mellon; Kwan-Liu Ma, University of California, Davis; David O'Hallaron, Carnegie Mellon; Leonardo Ramirez-Guzman, Carnegie Mellon; Nathan Stone, PSC; Ricardo Taborda-Rios, Carnegie Mellon; and John Urbanic, PSC.
- See the news release.
- Jeff Gardner, PSC; Vladimir Litvin, California Institute of Technology; and Evan Turner, Texas Advanced Computing Center, won the best paper award at the 2006 CLADE (Challenges of Large Applications in Distributed Environments) workshop in Paris, France.
The paper, "Creating Personal Adaptive Clusters for Managing Scientific Jobs in a Distributed Computing Environment," described a system for aggregating processors on demand from across the distributed resources of the National Science Foundation TeraGrid.
The virtual environment described in the paper was built on top of an existing middleware tool called GridShell. The combination, including the pre-existing middleware, was renamed MyCluster. In production use on the TeraGrid, as of May 2006 it had already handled about 100,000 jobs and 900 teraflops of scientific computation.
SC06 Analytics Challenge Award
CLADE Award
2005
- SPICE (Simulated Pore Interactive Computing Environment), a project led by Peter Coveney, University of London, with PSC's Sergiu Sanielevicias a co-author, won the HPC Analytics Challenge award, a first-time SC award given for innovative techniques in rigorous data analysis, advanced networks and high-end visualization to solve a complex, real-world problem.
- See the news release.
HPC Analytics Challenge Award
2004
- PSC's newest system, based on Sandia National Lab's "Red Storm" design (now designated "XT3" by Cray) won three HPCWire Reader's Choice Awards: for Most Innovative Implementation; for Most Innovative HPC Technology; and for Most Important Emerging Technology.
- See the news release.
HPCWire Reader's Choice Awards
Most Innovative ImplementationMost Innovative HPC Technology
Most Important Emerging Technology
2003
- The "Quake Group", led by Jacobo Bielak, Omar Ghattas, and David O'Hallaron of CMU and George Biros of the University of Pennsylvania won the both the Gordon Bell prize for High Performance Computing and the SC2003 Award for Special Accomplishment Based on Innovation for developing earthquake simulations on the TCS that play an important role in reducing seismic risk. Other group members include Volkan Akcelik, Ioannis Epanomeritakis, Antonio Fernandez, Eui Joong Kim, Julio Lopez, and Tiankai Tu of Carnegie Mellon, and Greg Foss and John Urbanicof PSC.
- See the news release.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Big City Shakedown".
- The TeraGyroid project, led by Peter Coveney, University of London, and Bruce Boghosian, Tufts University, coupled cutting-edge grid technologies, high-performance computing, visualization and computational steering capabilities to produce a major leap forward in soft condensed matter simulation. During SC2003, the largest Lattice Boltzmann simulation ever (10243) was carried out on PSC's TCS, interacting with smaller simulations at Daresbury Lab (5123) and 1283lattices steered on a host of systems on the UK RealityGrid and on the US TeraGrid. Simulation checkpoints were migrated back and forth across the Atlantic at 300-400 Mbps. Collaborative computational steering and visualization was demonstrated, using the TeraGrid visualization cluster at ANL and SGI Onyx systems in Manchester and Phoenix.
- See the news release.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article about the TeraGyroid project, "Ketchup on the Grid with Joysticks"
- "A New Parallel Kernel-Independent Fast Multipole Method" by Lexing Ying, George Biros, Denis Zorin, and Harper Langston (New York University) presented a new adaptive fast multipole algorithm and its parallel implementation, which was tested on up to 3000 processors of LeMieux at PSC. The authors solved viscous flow problems with up to 2.1 billion unknowns, reaching 1.6 Tflops in certain parts of the computation, and a sustained rate of 1.13 Tflops. This paper was also a finalist for the Gordon Bell prize.
- See the news release.
- See the paper, A New Parallel Kernel-Independent Fast Multipole Method.
- PSC was one of five finalists for the Computerworld Honors 21stCentury Achievement Award. PSC was honored for "using information technology to make great strides toward remarkable social achievement in Science," according to Daniel Morrow, Executive Director of the Computerworld Honors Program.
- See the case study.
Gordon Bell Prize for High Performance Computing
SC2003 Special Accomplishment Based on Innovation
SC2003 HPC Challenge
Most Innovative Data-Intensive ApplicationSC2003 Best Student Paper
Computerworld Honors
21st Century Achievement Award Finalist2002
- James C. Phillips, Gengbin Zheng, Sameer Kumar, and Laxmikant V. Kale, from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, won the Gordon Bell Award for Special Accomplishment for their work on NAMD. NAMD maps the structure of large biological molecules and molecular systems. Using PSC's Lemieux system, NAMD scaled effectively and efficiently to over 2,000 processors.
- See the NAMD web site.
- See the news release.
- Volkan Akcelik of Carnegie Mellon, George Biros of New York University, and Omar Ghattas of Carnegie Mellon, won the award for Best Technical Paperat SC2002. Using PSC's Lemieux, they built on large-scale earthquake simulation work done previously at PSC.
- See the paper: Parallel Multiscale Gauss-Newton-Krylovmethods for Inverse Wave Propagation
- See the news release.
- LeMieux also participated in projects at SC2002 that received the "Bandwidth Challenge Award" and the "High Performance Computing Challenge Awards" for "the most geographically distributed application" and for "the most heterogeneous set of platforms."
Gordon Bell Award for Special Accomplishment
SC2002 Best Technical Paper
SC2002
Bandwidth ChallengeSC2002 High Performance Computing Challenge
1999
- Peter Kollman and Yong Duan of the University of California, San Francisco, were finalists in the CWSAin Science for their simulation of the folding action of a protein. Their 1 microsecond simulation, 100 times longer than any before, offers new insights into the folding process and could lead to more effective drugs for diseases believed to be caused by malfunctions in protein folding.
- See the news release
- See the case study
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Watching a Protein Fold"
- An intercontinental team consisting of computational scientists, networking and systems specialists in Stuttgart (Germany), Manchester (UK), Pittsburgh (USA) and Tsukuba (Japan) won top prize for the most challenging scientific application in the HPC Games at SC1999. The molecular dynamics simulation with over two million particles ran concurrently on a Hitachi SR8000 at ETL (Tsukuba), and on CRAY T3Es at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, CSAR (Manchester) and HLRS(Stuttgart).
- See the news release
Computerworld Smithsonian Award in Science Finalist
SC1999 High-Performance Computing Award
1998
- Yang Wangof the PSC collaborated with scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, National Energy Research Supercomputing Center and the University of Bristol, UK, to win the Gordon Bell Prize for Best Achievement in High-Performance Computing at SC1998. Their first-principles simulation of complex magnetic properties is the world's first fully fledged scientific application to sustain more than one Teraflop. This was accomplished on a 1480-processor T3E-1200 system at Cray Research.
- See the news release.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Magnetic Moments"
- A group of researchers including PSC's Greg Hood and others from Carnegie Mellon University, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), Princeton University, the University of Edinburgh (Scotland) and other PSC staff won the Most Insightful Application award at SC1998. They linked an MRI scanner at UPMC with PSC's CRAY T3Eover high-speed networks. A series of complex data manipulations converted raw MRI data to 3-D images of the MRI subject's brain, which were then transmitted and displayed on a visualization screen at a remote site, in this case the show floor at Orlando. Typically for this kind of research — known as “functional MRI” — it takes a day or more to produce 3-D images; the Pittsburgh team cut the delay to seconds.
- See the news release.
Gordon Bell Prize
Best Achievement in High-Performance ComputingSC1998 Most Insightful Application
1997
- Kelvin Drogemeierwon both the CWSA in Science and the DISCOVER magazine award for Technological Innovation in Computer Software for his research in storm forecasting at PSC.
- See the CWSA description.
- See the Computerworld Smithsonian award news release.
- See the Discover award news release.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Faster than a Speeding Storm".
Computerworld Smithsonian Award in Science
Discover Magazine Award for Technological Innovation
1996
- The Center for Light Microscope Imaging and Biotechnology, a National Science Foundation science and technology center based at Carnegie Mellon University, won the 1996 CWSA in Science for developing automated light microscope technology to observe the dynamics of living cells.
- See the CWSA description.
- See the news release.
- Gary Glatzmaierof the Los Alamos National Laboratory was awarded the Fernbach Award for the first three-dimensional computer simulation of how the Earth's magnetic field is generated and how it occasionally reverses its direction. The work required 5,000 hours of computing time to simulate 80,000 years of geodynamic history, providing insights into the nature of the Earth's magnetic field.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "When North goes South".
- Three of the four finalists in addition to the Center for Light Microscope Imaging and Biotechnology (see above) in the Science category of the Computerworld Smithsonian Awards were also collaborations with PSC.
- At Carnegie Mellon University, Ted Russell and colleague Greg McRae, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, used PSC's Cray C90 to demonstrate that smog reduction strategies can be improved through selective control of nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons, produced from automobile emissions and many other manmade sources.
- See the CWSA description.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Out Goes the Bad Air".
- See the CWSA description.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "When North Goes South".
- See the CWSA description.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Mystery of the Wrong Orbit".
- A collaborative effort among three of the nation's leading computational research centers won a Gold Medal in the Concurrency category of the High Performance Computing Challenge at Supercomputing '96. A team of physicists, software developers and networking experts from Oak Ridge National Labs, Sandia National Labs and the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center linked disparate, highly parallel computing systems at their respective sites. They applied this "metacomputing" approach to a large-scale materials science computation. The HPC Challenge judges cited them for demonstrating the ability to solve significant problems using diverse systems linked over high-speed networks.
Computerworld Smithsonian Award in Science
Fernbach Award
Computerworld Smithsonian Award Finalists
SC1996 High-Performance Computing Challenge
1995
- Mordecai-Mark Mac Low of the University of Chicago was a finalist in the CWSA in Science for his simulations of the impact of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 on Jupiter.
- See the CWSA description.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Doomsday at a Distance".
- Paul Woodwardof the University of Minnesota received the Fernbach Award for his simulation of the turbulent dynamics of the hot gasses in the Sun's outer layer.
- See the news release.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Unlocking the Sun's Secrets".
Computerworld Smithsonian Award Finalist
Fernbach Award
1994
- The CWSA for Breakthrough Computational Science was awarded to researchers Charles Peskin and David McQueenof the New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences for development of a three-dimensional computational model of blood flow in the heart, its nearby valves and major vessels.
- See the news release.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Heart Throb"
- Charles Peskinof the New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences for his research on blood flow in the heart.
- See the news release.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Heart Throb"
- University of Pittsburgh biologist John Rosenbergwas a finalist for the DISCOVER Magazine Award for Technological Innovation in Computer Software for his research at PSC into the biological process by which proteins recognize and attach to the correct spot on a DNA strand.
- See the news release.
Computerworld Smithsonian Award for Breakthrough Computational Science
Fernbach Award
DISCOVER Magazine Computer Software Award Finalist
1993
- See the CWSA description.
- See the news release.
- Hiroaki Kitano, of Carnegie Mellon University's Center for Machine Translation and the Sony Computer Science Laboratory in Japan, received the most prestigious award in artificial intelligence for researchers under 35, the Computers and Thought Award. This award, given by the International Joint Conferences for Artificial Intelligence, honors Kitano's work in simultaneous language translation programs.
- See the news release.
- A distributed volume-rendering application developed by Joel Welling, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center scientific visualization specialist, was named Most Heterogeneous Application at the Supercomputing '93 Conference.
- See the news release.
Computerworld Smithsonian Award in Science
The Pittsburgh Supercomputing Centeritself was the recipient of the CWSA in Science for its efforts to bring high-performance computing to bear on research that improves the quality of human life. The award cited the center's involvment in important biomedical research on interactions between proteins and DNA.Computers and Thought Award
SC1993 Most Hetereogenous
1992
- The Westinghouse Electric Corporationreceived the CWSA award in Science for the creation and operation of supercomputing centers at local universities, including the operation of PSC.
- See the CWSA description.
Computerworld Smithsonian Award in Science
1991
- John Rosenberg, University of Pittsburgh, was a finalist in the Discover Award for Computer Software for his work to simulate the complicated interaction between DNA and a enzyme protein.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Kinky DNA"
- The team of John Rosenberg, University of Pittsburgh, Peter Kollman, University of California, San Francisco, Robert Swendsen, Carnegie Mellon University, and Shankar Kumar, University of Pittsburgh, won the Forefronts of Large-Scale Computing Award for their work in applying molecular dynamics to DNA research.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Kinky DNA"
Discover Award for Computer Software Finalist
Forefronts of Large-Scale Computing Award
1989
- Gregory McRae, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, won the first Forefronts of Large Scale Computation Award for his work in computational modeling of large atmospheric systems.
- See the Projects in Scientific Computing article, "Out Goes the Bad Air".