$27 Million Award Bolsters Research Computing Grid

Every day researchers add another sea of data to an ocean of knowledge on the world around us — billions on top of billions of measurements, images and observations of the tiniest subatomic particles up to the movement of planets and stars...

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UPTON, N.Y. — Every day researchers add another sea of data to an ocean of knowledge on the world around us — billions on top of billions of measurements, images and observations of the tiniest subatomic particles up to the movement of planets and stars.

“Making sense of that — simulating, mapping, analyzing — this is how researchers work these days,” said Miron Livny, computer sciences professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. “More and more researchers need more and more computing power to support that work.”

To that end, the Department of Energy Office of Science and the National Science Foundation have committed up to $27 million to Open Science Grid (OSG), a nine-member partnership extending the reach of distributed high-throughput computing (DHTC) capabilities.

Distributed computing musters the power of a network of machines that reside at different institutions to make the best use of all available processing and storage capacity, giving scientists the muscle of a supercomputer that may otherwise be out of reach.

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