- E-Science
The term e-Science (or eScience) is used to describe computationally intensive
science that is carried out in highly distributed network environments, or science that uses immensedata sets that requiregrid computing ; the term sometimes includes technologies that enable distributed collaboration, such as theAccess Grid . The term was created by John Taylor, the Director General of the United Kingdom'sOffice of Science and Technology in1999 and was used to describe a large funding initiative starting inNovember 2000 . Examples of the kind of science include social simulations, particle physics, earth sciences andbio-informatics . Particle physics has a particularly well developed e-Science infrastructure due to their need for adequate computing facilities for the analysis of results and storage of data originating from theCERN Large Hadron Collider , which is due to start taking data in2008 .Characteristics and examples of e-Science
Due to the complexity of the software and the backend infrastructural requirements, e-Science projects usually involve large teams managed and developed by research laboratories, large universities or governments. Currently there is a large focus in e-Science in the
United Kingdom , where the UK e-Science programme provides significant funding.Development of e-Science is also advanced in Europe where the development of computing capabilities to support the CERN Large Hadron Collider has led to the development of e-Science and Grid infrastructures which are also used by other disciplines.
The UK e-Science programme
The UK e-Science programme comprises a wide range of resources, centres and people including the [http://www.nesc.ac.uk National e-Science Centre] (NeSC) which is managed by the Universities of Glasgow and Edinburgh, with facilities in both cities.
Within the UK there are various regional e-Science centres, which support their local universities and projects, including:
* [http://www.besc.ac.uk/ Belfast e-Science Centre] (BeSC)
* [http://www.escience.cam.ac.uk Cambridge e-Science Centre] (CeSC)
* [http://www.e-science.stfc.ac.uk/ STFC e-Science Centre] (STFCeSC)
* [http://www.esnw.ac.uk/ e-Science North West] (eSNW)
*National Grid Service (NGS)
* [http://www.e-science.lancs.ac.uk/ Lancaster University Centre for e-Science]
* [http://www.lesc.ic.ac.uk/ London e-Science Centre] (LeSC)
* [http://www.neresc.ac.uk North East Regional e-Science Centre] (NEReSC)
* [http://e-science.ox.ac.uk Oxford e-Science Centre] (OeSC)
* [http://www.e-science.soton.ac.uk Southampton e-Science Centre] (SeSC)
* [http://www.wesc.ac.uk/ Welsh e-Science Centre] (WeSC)There are also various centres of excellence and research centres which have a strong impact on e-Science.
The US projects
US-based initiatives, where the term
cyberinfrastructure is typically used to define e-Science projects, are primarily funded by theNational Science Foundation and Department of Energy (in particular the Office of Science). NSF's Office of Cyberinfrastructure, for example, supports theTeraGrid project which provides integrated resources and services operated by some of the nation's supercomputing centers including:*
Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
*National Center for Supercomputing Applications
*National Center for Atmospheric Research
*Texas Advanced Computing Center
*San Diego Supercomputer Center and partner high-performance computing centers at
*
Louisiana State University
*Purdue University
*Indiana University
*Oak Ridge National Laboratory
*Argonne National Laboratory
*University of Minnesota The Department of Energy also supports e-Science through high performance computing and other initiatives involving its laboratories, including, among others:
*
Argonne National Laboratory
*Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
*Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
*Oak Ridge National Laboratory
*Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory ee also
*
e-Social Science
*E-research
*Distributed computing
*Citizen science External links
* [http://www.vl-e.nl The Dutch Virtual Laboratory for e-science (VL-e) project]
* [http://www.rcuk.ac.uk/escience/ UK Research Council's e-Science program]
* [http://www.nesc.ac.uk UK National e-Science Centre]
* [http://www.ncess.ac.uk/ UK National Centre for e-Social Science] and their [http://www.ncess.ac.uk/support/wiki Wiki on e-Social Science]
* [http://www.cern.ch CERN]
* [http://lhc-new-homepage.web.cern.ch/lhc-new-homepage/ Large Hadron Collider]
* [http://www.teragrid.org NSF TeraGrid Project]
* [http://www.ahessc.ac.uk/ Arts and Humanities E-Science Support Centre (AHESSC)]
* [http://www.omii.ac.uk/ Open Middleware Infrastructure Institute UK]
* [http://www.e-science.net e-Science Institute of Iran]
* [https://wiki.lib.umn.edu/E-Science/HomePage E-Science and Data Services Collaborative (EDSC)]
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