Aspen
NCSA
HPCwire

Since 1986 - Covering the Fastest Computers
in the World and the People Who Run Them

Language Flags

Visit additional Tabor Communication Publications

Datanami
Digital Manufacturing Report
HPC in the Cloud
Green Computing Report

Tabor Communications
Corporate Video

NCSA Leader Thom Dunning Announces Retirement


Oct. 1 — After nearly eight years at the helm of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Thom H. Dunning Jr. has announced that he will retire as the center's director in 2013. He will remain as NCSA's leader until the University of Illinois completes a national search for his successor and then plans to continue as a professor in the University'sDepartment of Chemistry.

"My career has been blessed by its association with creative, innovative colleagues who are dedicated to excellence," said Dr. Dunning. "The past eight years at NCSA have been both remarkable and rewarding. I am confident that NCSA will continue this tradition of excellence far into the future."

"With wisdom and vision, Thom Dunning has successfully piloted NCSA through a period of great change," said Illinois' Vice Chancellor for Research Peter Schiffer. "The center has successfully transitioned to a grant-driven funding model, has increased collaboration with other campus units and colleagues, and has embarked on long-term strategic planning efforts designed to position the center for future success."

During Dunning's tenure, NCSA continued to fulfill its primary mission, providing the computing power and expertise required for breakthrough research in science and engineering as well as many other fields. NCSA has also been exploring other innovative uses of advanced computing technologies, a recognition that such technologies now lie at the heart of many research advances.

Thom Dunning is the epitome of a scholar and a gentlemen. He is one of the most humble and accomplished computational scientists in America. NCSA and UI have prospered greatly during his leadership tenure, having won two of the most critical cyberinfrastructure grants in the nation.”

John Melchi, NCSA senior associate director for Administration

In the past eight years, NCSA has attracted more than $394 million in federal grant funding. NCSA is currently leading the two largest computing projects ever funded by the National Science Foundation: the Blue Waters projectand the Extreme Science & Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) project. NCSA will process and hold the data for both the Dark Energy Survey project, whichjust recently captured "first light" with its 570-megapixel camera in Chile, and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope project, which is under consideration for funding by the National Science Foundation.

In the Institute for Chemistry Literacy through Computational Science, an NSF-funded Math & Science Partnership project, NCSA has shown how the use of computational tools and simulations can improve high school education. The center has also increased its role in preparing the next-generation of researchers through theVirtual School of Computational Science and Engineering. Finally, NCSA recently began work, funded by the state of Illinois, on the Illinois Shared Learning Environment, which will support teaching, learning, and research in schools across Illinois.

Dunning spearheaded the creation of the Institute for Advanced Computing Applications and Technologies to foster increased collaboration among NCSA's technology experts and discipline researchers across the Urbana-Champaign campus. Projects in IACAT range from computational modeling of physical and biological systems to the development of advanced information systems for sensor networks and the innovative uses of computing in the arts and humanities. He also supported the creation of the Institute for Computing in the Humanities, Arts and Social Science (I-CHASS) and eDream (the Emerging Digital Research and Education in Arts Media Institute).

He oversaw both the move of the center's 200+ staff into the newly constructed NCSA Building and the construction of the National Petascale Computing Facility. The latter is an energy efficient, LEED-certified Gold state-of-the-art data center, the only one of its capability on a university campus in the world.

During Thom's tenure and leadership, NCSA has moved through a very tenuous time to being as strong as it has ever been. The nature of the funding that NCSA has counted on during its early years has completely changed. The way NCSA manages its internal operations has significantly changed. The way NCSA actively collaborates with various disciplinary communities, including industry and our international partners, is dramatically different. All of these have been managed effectively, with NCSA now finding itself in a uniquely strong position. We owe Thom a lot, and will miss him immensely, but he is leaving through a well thought through process that will allow Illinois and NCSA to have plenty of time to find the right person to lead us into the next phase—and he is leaving the new director-to–be with an arsenal of resources and strengths that will be very valuable in continuing to move NCSA forward successfully.”

Danny Powell, NCSA executive director

Dunning came to the University of Ilinois in 2004. He previously held leadership positions at the Joint Institute for Computational Sciences at the University of Tennessee and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the University of North Carolina System, the Office of Science at the U.S. Department of Energy, the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. He was instrumental in creating DOE's Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) program, the federal government's first comprehensive program aimed at developing the software infrastructure needed for leadership-class scientific computing.

He is a fellow of the American Chemical Society, the American Physical Society, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Dunning received the U.S. Department of Energy's E. O. Lawrence Award in Chemistry in 1997 and the American Chemical Society's Computers in Chemical and Pharmaceutical Research Award in 2011. Through his career, Dr. Dunning never lost his interest in and passion for molecular science. His research group in the Department of Chemistry focuses on the use of state-of-the-art computational approaches to understand and predict the structure, energetics and reactivity of molecules. His team has recently published work indicating that a previously unknown type of chemical bond is responsible for the stability of hypervalent molecules.

Dunning is NCSA's fourth director. Larry Smarr led the center from its inception in 1985 to 2000, Dan Reed from 2000-2003, and current NCSA Chief Technology Officer Rob Pennington served as interim director in 2004.

-----

Source: NCSA

Sponsored Links

High-Performance Computing in Action
Businesses that want to be on the cutting edge of their industries are increasingly turning to high-performance computing (HPC) solutions to handle complex compute processes and speed up their rate of innovation. Download this Executive Brief to see how businesses in energy, life sciences and entertainment put HPC solutions to work in their operations.

Accelerate your science with Seneca
One of the first HPC providers installing a 4X NVIDIA Kepler K-20 cluster. Invites you to a free evaluation on Seneca’s NVIDIA K20 Kepler cluster, pre-loaded with AMBER, NAMD, LAMMPS

Webinar: Programming Heterogeneous X64+GPU Systems Using OpenACC
Join Michael Wolfe as he compares the advantages and costs of using both low-level models and the directive-based OpenACC model for programming accelerated heterogeneous systems. Registration is free.

May 24, 2013

May 23, 2013

May 22, 2013

May 21, 2013

May 20, 2013

May 17, 2013

May 16, 2013

May 15, 2013

May 14, 2013

May 13, 2013


Most Read Features

Most Read Around the Web

Most Read This Just In


Feature Articles

Exascale Advocates Stand on Nuclear Stockpiles

In quieter times, sounding the bell of funding big science with big systems tends to resonate further than when ears are already burning with sour economic and national security news. For exascale's future, however, the time could be ripe to instill some sense of urgency....
Read more...

NSF Forges Further Beyond FLOPs

In a recent solicitation, the NSF laid out needs for furthering its scientific and engineering infrastructure with new tools to go beyond top performance, Having already delivered systems like Stampede and Blue Waters, they're turning an eye to solving data-intensive challenges. We spoke with the agency's Irene Qualters and Barry Schneider about..
Read more...

CERN, Google Drive Future of Global Science Initiatives

Large-scale, worldwide scientific initiatives rely on some cloud-based system to both coordinate efforts and manage computational efforts at peak times that cannot be contained within the combined in-house HPC resources. Last week at Google I/O, Brookhaven National Lab’s Sergey Panitkin discussed the role of the Google Compute Engine in providing computational support to ATLAS, a detector of high-energy particles at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).
Read more...

Short Takes

NASA Builds 'Climate in a Box'

May 23, 2013 | The study of climate change is one of those scientific problems where it is almost essential to model the entire Earth to attain accurate results and make worthwhile predictions. In an attempt to make climate science more accessible to smaller research facilities, NASA introduced what they call ‘Climate in a Box,’ a system they note acts as a desktop supercomputer.
Read more...

Building Supercomputers with Raspberries

May 22, 2013 | At some point in the not-too-distant future, building powerful, miniature computing systems will be considered a hobby for high schoolers, just as robotics or even Lego-building are today. That could be made possible through recent advancements made with the Raspberry Pi computers.
Read more...

Running Computational Fluid Dynamics in the Cloud

May 16, 2013 | When it comes to cloud, long distances mean unacceptably high latencies. Researchers from the University of Bonn in Germany examined those latency issues of doing CFD modeling in the cloud by utilizing a common CFD and its utilization in HPC instance types including both CPU and GPU cores of Amazon EC2.
Read more...

Computing the Physics of Bubbles

May 15, 2013 | Supercomputers at the Department of Energy’s National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) have worked on important computational problems such as collapse of the atomic state, the optimization of chemical catalysts, and now modeling popping bubbles.
Read more...

Sponsored Whitepapers

Best Practices in Big Data Storage

05/10/2013 | Cleversafe, Cray, DDN, NetApp, & Panasas | From Wall Street to Hollywood, drug discovery to homeland security, companies and organizations of all sizes and stripes are coming face to face with the challenges – and opportunities – afforded by Big Data. Before anyone can utilize these extraordinary data repositories, however, they must first harness and manage their data stores, and do so utilizing technologies that underscore affordability, security, and scalability.

Progress in Parallel: the Bull Parallel Programming Center

04/15/2013 | Bull | “50% of HPC users say their largest jobs scale to 120 cores or less.” How about yours? Are your codes ready to take advantage of today’s and tomorrow’s ultra-parallel HPC systems? Download this White Paper by Analysts Intersect360 Research to see what Bull and Intel’s Center for Excellence in Parallel Programming can do for your codes.

Sponsored Multimedia

SGI DMF ZeroWatt Disk Solution

In this demonstration of SGI DMF ZeroWatt disk solution, Dr. Eng Lim Goh, SGI CTO, discusses a function of SGI DMF software to reduce costs and power consumption in an exascale (Big Data) storage datacenter.

Cray CS300-AC Cluster Supercomputer Air Cooling Technology Video

The Cray CS300-AC cluster supercomputer offers energy efficient, air-cooled design based on modular, industry-standard platforms featuring the latest processor and network technologies and a wide range of datacenter cooling requirements.

SC12 Editorial Feature HPCwire Soundbite sponsored by ISC

HPC Job Bank


Featured Events


  • June 16, 2013 - June 20, 2013
    ISC'13
    Leipzig,
    Germany

  • June 17, 2013 - June 18, 2013
    Forecast 2013
    San Francisco, CA
    United States





HPCwire Events