Stanford, tech execs unveil science centre
Published: 21 Jun 2006 11:00 BST
Stanford University opened the doors on Tuesday to a new computational earth science centre, joined by project backer and alumn Scott McNealy, chairman of Sun Microsystems.
The new centre, called the Center for Computational Earth and Environmental Science (CEES), is an extension of Stanford's School of Earth Sciences and will house an interdisciplinary research programme and new computing facility, equipped with Sun hardware and software.
The goal of the centre is to tackle problems in geosciences, such as climate change, with better computational power for analysis, simulation and prediction of earth systems. Stanford's hope is that the research will advance earthquake detection, oil exploration and predictions of the effects of global warming.
As CEES Director Jerry Harris put it at the opening ceremony, the centre is about "computer-driven science and science-driven computer design", meaning that CEES partners from industry and government will be able to learn from its work on how to improve the computational efficiencies of their own systems.
"Our goal is to build the capacity for large-scale computing" for research in earth and environmental science, Harris said. "We want to bring the best systems to bear on the world's most challenging problems."
The centre is a partnership of Stanford's earth sciences school, the US Geological Survey and private companies including Cisco Systems, 3DGO, Chevron and BP. As a founding member, Sun has contributed $3m (£1.6m) to the centre's new high-productivity computing facility, including hardware and software such as its x64 (x86, 64-bit) and SPARC-based Sun Fire servers and the Solaris operating system. Cisco has donated $250,000.
Because it's an interdisplinary programme, the centre will also build on the intellectual capital within Stanford, drawing research from various areas of study, including geology and computer sciences.
Stanford president John Hennessy, who dedicated the centre at the Mitchell Earth Sciences Building, said that the hardware is only a first step in figuring out how to write the software and algorithms to solve real-world issues around energy and water resources, environmental hazards and oil excavation.
"We will advance scientific computing by combining both disciplines," Hennessy said.
McNealy, who founded Sun with Andy Bechtolsheim while barely out of Stanford, said during the ceremony that one of Sun's goals is to "eliminate the digital divide without torching the planet". Because bringing computers to the world's population poses great environmental hazards, there needs to be a better system, a computing network, to reduce those risks, he said.
Supporting CEES is a complement to that goal, he said, because it's about combining resources in industry, academia and technology, then sharing knowledge and computing power, and creating computing efficiency, to answer "some very big questions".
"Wouldn't you like to know when the next big one will hit," McNealy said.










