Title: WTEC International Assessment of Simulation-Based Engineering and Science: Education
1WTEC International Assessment of
Simulation-Based Engineering and Science
Education
- Celeste Sagui
- North Carolina State University
- Sharon Glotzer
- University of Michigan
Sponsors NSF, DOE, DOD, NIH, NASA, NIST
2Simulation-Based Engineering Science
- SBES involves the use of computer modeling and
simulation to solve mathematical formulations of
physical models of engineered and natural systems - SBES or computational science engineering
is an established (though not mature) field.
3SBES Why now?
- A tipping point in SBES
- Computer simulation is more pervasive today, and
having more impact, than ever before - hardly a
field untouched - Fields are being transformed by simulation
- Reached a useful level of predictiveness
complements traditional pillars of science
4SBES Why now?
- A tipping point in SBES
- Computers are now affordable and accessible to
researchers in every country around the world. - The near-zero entry-level cost to perform a
computer simulation means that anyone can
practice SBES, and from anywhere. - Flattening world of computer simulation that
will continue to flatten - everyone can do it.
5SBES Why now?
- A tipping point in SBES
- US, Japanese, EU companies are building the next
generation of computer architectures, with the
promise of thousand-fold or more increases of
computer power coming in the next half-decade. - These new massively multicore computer chip
architectures will allow unprecedented accuracy
and resolution, as well as the ability to solve
the highly complex problems that face society
today.
6SBES Why now?
- A tipping point in SBES
- The toughest scientific and technological
problems facing society today are big problems - alternative energy sources and global warming
- sustainable infrastructures
- mechanisms of life, curing disease and
personalizing medicine. - These problems are complex and messy, and their
solution requires a partnership among experiment,
theory and simulation, and among industry,
academia and government, working across
disciplines.
7SBES Why now?
- Simulation is key to scientific discovery and
engineering innovation. - Recent reports argue the United States is at risk
at losing of its competitive edge. - Our continued capability as a nation to lead in
simulation-based discovery and innovation is key
to our ability to compete in the 21st century.
8Previous SBES study
- Our study builds upon previous efforts
- Workshops run by NSF Engineering Directorate
- NSF Blue Ribbon Panel report chaired by J.
Tinsley Oden, May 2006 - lays out intellectual
arguments for SBES - SBES broadened to SBES
- many previous reports on computational science
http//www.nsf.gov/pubs/reports/sbes_final_report.
pdf
9SBES - A National Priority
- The Promise Advances in mathematical modeling,
in computational algorithms, in the speed of
computers, and in the science and technology of
data intensive computing, have brought the field
of computer simulation to the threshold of a new
era, an era in which unprecedented improvements
in the health, security, productivity, and
competitiveness of our nation may be possible. A
host of critical technologies are on the horizon
that cannot be understood, developed, or utilized
without simulation methods.
From Oden report
10WTEC SBES Study Sponsors
- To inform program managers in U.S. research
agencies and decision makers of the status,
trends and activity levels in SBES research
abroad, these agencies sponsored this study - National Science Foundation (NSF)
- Department of Energy
- Department of Defense
- National Institutes of Health
- NASA
- National Institute of Standards and Technology
11Overall Scope Objectives of WTEC International
Study
- Study designed to
- Gather information on the worldwide status and
trends of SBES research - State of the art, regional levels of activities
- US leadership status
- Opportunities for US leadership
- Disseminate this information to government
decision makers and the research community - Findings, not recommendations
12Structure of Study
- Primary thematic areas
- Life sciences and medicine
- Materials
- Energy and sustainability
- Core cross-cutting issues
- Next-generation algorithms and high performance
computing - Multiscale simulation
- Simulation software
- Validation, verification, and quantifying
uncertainty - Engineering systems
- Big data and data-driven simulations
- Education and training
- Funding
13The SBES Study Team
- Sharon Glotzer (Chair), U Michigan
- Sangtae Kim, NAE (Vice-chair), Purdue
- Peter Cummings, Vanderbilt/ORNL
- Abhi Deshmukh, Texas AM
- Martin Head-Gordon, UC Berkeley
- George Karniadakis, Brown U
- Linda Petzold, (NAE) UC Santa Barbara
- Celeste Sagui, NC State U
- Matsunoba Shinozuko, (NAE) UC Irvine
- Tomas de la Rubia, LLNL
- Jack Dongarra, (NAE) UTK/ORNL
- James Duderstadt (NAE), U Michigan
- David Shaw, D.E. Shaw Research
- Gilbert Omenn (IOM), U Michigan
- J. Tinsley Oden (NAE), UT Austin
- Marty Wortman, Texas AM
14Study Process Timeline
- US Baseline Workshop November 2007
- Bibliometrics analysis
- Panel visited 57 sites in Europe, Asia
- Universities, national labs, industrial labs
- Also conversations, reports, research papers,
bibliometric analysis provided basis for
assessment - Public workshop on study findings in April 2008
- Final report now in review
- Research directions planning workshop in April
2009
15Sites Visited in China December 2007
Peking Univ./CCSE, Tsinghua Univ./DEM, ICCAS,
ICMSEC/CAS, IPE/CAS,
Dalian Univ. of Technology
SSC, Shanghai Univ., Fudan Univ.
http//www.lonelyplanet.com/maps/asia/china/
16Sites Visited in Japan December 2007
RIKEN/ACCC
NIMS/CMSC, RICS/AIST
Kyoto Univ.
CRIEPI, SBI, Univ. Tokyo
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth ST (ESC), Nissan
Research Center, Mitsubishi Chemicals
Toyota Central RD Labs., IMS
http//www.ease.com/randyj/japanmap.htm
17Sites Visited in Europe February 2008
Unilever RD, Daresbury Lab
Univ. Oxford, Univ. Cambridge, Unilever Centre
Univ. College London, The Thomas Young Centre
Vrije Univ.
DTU
ZIB
IWM,BASF, ITTPE, Univ. Karlsruhe
IFP
Paris Simulation Network
Tech. Univ. Munich
IMFT, ENSEEIHT, IRIT
CERN, EPFL/IACS, ETH, IBM, Univ. Zürich
Eni SpA, MOX Remote site visit
CIMNE, ICMAB/CSIC
57 sites/36 in Europe
http//www.europeetravel.com/maps/western-europe-m
ap.htm
18Major Trends in SBES Research
www.wtec.org/sbes
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
19Life sciences medicine, materials, and energy
sustainability are among most likely sectors to
be transformed by SBES
- SBES is changing the way disease is treated, the
way surgery is performed and patients are
rehabilitated, the way we understand the brain - SBES is changing the way materials components
are designed, developed, and used in all
industrial sectors - E.g. ICME (National Academies Report 2008, T.
Pollock, et al) - SBES is aiding in the recovery of untapped oil,
the discovery utilization of new energy
sources, and the way we design sustainable
infrastructures
20Findings Top FourMajor Trends in SBES Research
- Data-intensive applications (esp Switzerland and
Japan) - Integration of (real-time) experimental and
observational data with modeling and simulation
to expedite discovery and engineering solutions - Millisecond timescales for proteins and other
complex matter with molecular resolution - Science-based engineering simulations (US slight
lead) - Increased fidelity through inclusion of physics
and chemistry - Multicore for petascale and beyond not just
faster time to solution - increased problem
complexity - Cheap GPUs today give up to 200x speed up on
hundreds of apps!
21Threats to United States Leadership in SBES
www.wtec.org/sbes
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
22Some general trends RD map
Figure from the council on Competitiveness
Competitiveness Index Where America stands
(2007). Data from Main Science and Technology
Indicators 2006 (OECD 2006).
23US share of global output in ST
New SE PhDs
Figure from the council on Competitiveness
Competitiveness Index Where America stands
(2007). Data from Main Science and Technology
Indicators 2006 (OECD 2006) NSFs Science and
Engineering Indicators (NSB 2006), and the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office.
24Threats to US leadership in SBESEducation
Impacts
- Finding 1 The world of computing is flat, and
anyone can do it. We must do it better, and
exploit new architectures before those
architectures become ubiquitous ? crucial to
train next generations of SB engineers and
scientists.
25Threats to US leadership in SBES
- Top 500 list US at top today. But Japan, France,
Germany have world-class resources, faculty and
students and are committed to HPC/SBES for long
haul. - Japan has an industry-university-govt roadmap out
to 2025 (exascale) - Germany investing nearly US1B in new HPC push,
also with EU - Cheap to start up, hire in SBES (e.g. India)
- 100M NVIDIA GPUs w/CUDA compilers worldwide
- Every desktop, laptop, etc. with NVIDIA card in
last two years - Speed-ups of factors up to 1000. Applications
from every sector.
26Threats to US leadership in SBESEducation
Impacts
- Finding 2 A persistent pattern of subcritical
funding overall for SBES threatens US leadership
and continued needed advances amidst a recent
surge of strategic investments in SBES abroad.
The surge reflects recognition by those countries
of the role of simulations in advancing national
competitiveness and its effectiveness as a
mechanism for economic stimulus.
27 Threats to US leadership in SBES
- Germany restructuring universities new
univ-industry partnerships - 20 year-on-year increase effective
restructuring to support collaboration - E.g. Fraunhofer IWM Karlsruhe University
(16M/yr, 44 industry, 50 SBES) - Japan committed to HPC, and leads US in bridging
physical systems modeling to social-scale
engineered systems - Singapore and Saudi Arabia - in SE
- Expect increased China and India presence in
scientific simulation software RD and SBES
generally over next decade due to new academic
industry commitment, new government
28Threats to US leadership in SBES
- China not yet a strong US competitor, but SBES
footprint changing rapidly - China contributes 13 of the worlds output in
simulation papers, second to US at 27 and
growing (but publish in lt1st tier journals and
cited less) - Non-uniform quality overall, but many high
quality examples - Strategic change towards innovation, and
recognition by industry and State that innovation
requires simulation - Chinas ST budget has doubled every 5 years
since 1990 - 70 to top 100 universities (80 all PhDs, 70
all , 50 all international,30 all UGs) - Recognition of need to train new generation of
computationally-savvy students, and new State
to do this under new VM of Education - gt211 Fund US1B/year, all projects must have
integrated simulation component
29Threats to US leadership in SBES
- We found healthy levels of SBES funding for
company-internal projects, underscoring
industrys recognition of the cost-effectiveness
and timeliness of SBES research. - The mismatch vis a vis the public-sectors
investment level in SBES hinders workforce
development. - We saw many examples of companies (including US
auto and chemical companies) working with EU
groups rather than US groups for better IP
agreements.
30Drivers and barriers for HPC usage in
industryUS Council on Competitiveness Report,
2008
- Hurdles There are three systemic barriers to
HPC 1) Lack of application software, 2) access
to talent, 3) Cost constraints (capital,
software, expertise). - Most of firms revealed they have important
problems they can not solve on their desktop
systems. Over 60 of firms would be willing to
pay outside organizations (non-profits,
engineering services companies, or major
universities) for realizing the benefits of HPC. - The survey implications are sobering critical
U.S. supply chains and the leadership of many
U.S. industries may be at risk if more companies
do not embrace modeling and simulation with HPC.
31Threats to US leadership in SBES
- Because SBES is often viewed within the US more
as an enabling technology for other disciplines,
rather than a discipline in its own right,
investment in and support of SBES is often not
prioritized as it should be at all levels of the
RD enterprise. - We found that investment in computational science
in the US and the preparation of the next
generation of computational researchers remains
insufficient to fully leverage the power of
computation for solving the biggest problems that
face the US going forward.
32Threats to US leadership in SBES
- Finding 3 Inadequate education and training of
the next generation of computational scientists
threatens global as well as US growth of SBES.
This is particularly urgent for the US, since
such a small percentage of its youths go into SE.
33Threats to US leadership in SBES
- Finding 2 Inadequate education and training of
the next generation of computational scientists
threatens global as well as US growth of SBES.
This is particularly urgent for the US, since
unless we prepare these researchers to use the
next generation of computer architectures we are
developing, we will not be able to exploit their
game-changing capabilities.
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
www.wtec.org/sbes
34Education and Training some statistics
- US has most citations and top-cited publications
but EU has surpassed in number of articles
SE articles and citations in all fields. From
Science and Engineering Indicators 2008 (NSB
2008).
35Education and Training some statistics
- US has been surpassed in number of PhDs in SE
Number of PhDs earned in Europe, Asia and North
America (2004). From Science and Engineering
Indicators 2008 (NSB 2008).
36Education and Training some statistics
- First-time, full-time graduate enrollment in SE
Dotted foreigners Solid permanent residents
NSF (2007)
37Education and Training some statistics
- Left Foreign students enrolled in tertiary
education, 2004. Right SE doctoral degrees
earned by foreign students
SE Indicators (2008)
38Education and Training some statistics
- Academic RD share of all RD, for selected
countries (SE Indicators, 2008)
39Education and Training some statistics
- Natural Sciences and Engineering degrees per
hundred 24-year olds, by country (SE
Indicators, 2008)
40Education and Training some statistics
- SE postdoctoral students at US universities, by
citizenship (SE Indicators, 2008) - Percentage of visa post-docs
- -Biological Sciences 59
- -Computer Sciences 60
- -Engineering 66
- -Physical Sciences 64
41Education and TrainingKey Findings
www.wtec.org/sbes
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
42Education and TrainingKey findings
- Finding 1 There is increasing Asian and European
leadership in SBES education due to dedicated
funding allocation and industrial participation.
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
www.wtec.org/sbes
43Finding 1 (a) Increasing Asian leadership due to
funding allocation and industrial participation
in education
- Japan committed to HPC, and leads US in bridging
physical systems modeling to social-scale
engineered systems - Japan Earth Simulation Center (Life Simulation
Center) developing new algorithms, specially
multiscale and multiphysics. Govt investing in
software innovation in algorithms will drive
hardware. - Systems Biology Institute (Japan) funded by
Japanese government for 10 years. Software
infrastructure Systems Biology Markup Language
(SBML), Systems Biology Graphical Notation
(SBGN), CellDesigner, and Web 2.0 Biology.
Difficult to publish software, the merit system
in this lab values software contributions as well
as publications. - University of Tokyo 21st Century Center of
Excellence (COE) Program 28 worldclass research
and education center in Japanese Universities ?
Global COE - Singapore and Saudi Arabia in SE (KAUST
university, with 80B endowment) - Increased China and India presence in scientific
simulation software RD and SBES over next
decade due to new academic industry commitment,
new government - Institute of Process Engineering (P.R. China)
50 of research funding comes from industry
(domestic and international significant funding
from the petro-chemical industry). Significant
government funding through the National Natural
Science Foundation of China and the Ministry of
Science and Technology (main focus multiscale
simulations for multiphase reactors ). - Tsinghua University Department of Engineering
Mechanics Strong interaction of RD centers with
industry and multinational companies. - Fudan University, Shanghai strong emphasis on
education, first analytical work then
computational. Prof. Yang is director of leading
computational polymer physics group and Vice
Minister of Education has allocated funding for
SBES and for 2000 students/year to study abroad.
44Finding 1 (a) Increasing Asian leadership due to
funding allocation and industrial participation
in education
- China not yet a strong US competitor, but SBES
footprint changing rapidly - China contributes 13 of the worlds output in
simulation papers, second to US at 27 and
growing (but publish in lt1st tier journals and
cited less) - Non-uniform quality overall, but many high
quality examples - Strategic change towards innovation, and
recognition by industry and State that innovation
requires simulation - Chinas ST budget has doubled every 5 years
since 1990 - 70 to top 100 universities (80 all PhDs, 70
all , 50 all international,30 all UGs) - Recognition of need to train new generation of
computationally-savvy students, and new State
to do this under new VM of Education - gt211 Fund US1B/year, all projects must have
integrated simulation component
45Finding 1 (b) Increasing European leadership due
to funding allocation and industrial
participation in education
- Center for Biological Sequence Analysis
(Bio-Centrum-DTU, Denmark) Danish Research
Foundation, the Danish Center for Scientific
Computing, the Villum Kann Rasmussen Foundation
and the Novo Nordisk Foundation (US100M), other
institutions in European Union, industry and the
American NIH (bioinformatics, systems biology). - CIMNE International Center for Numerical
Methods in Engineering (Barcelona, Spain)
independent research center, now as a consortium
between Polytechnic University of Catalonia, the
government of Catalonia, and the federal
government annual funding 10M from external
sources, focused on SBES research, training
activities and technology transfer. - Germany restructuring universities new
univ-industry partnerships. German research
foundation (DFG) has provided support for
collaborative research centers (SBF), transregion
projects (TR), transfer units (TBF), research
units (FOR), Priority programs, and Excellence
Initiatives. Many of these are based on or have
major components in SBES (Stuttgart, Karlsruhe,
Munich) and strong connections with industry - Fraunhofer Institute for the Mechanics of
Materials (Germany) 15.5M/year, 44 from
industry and 25-30 from government. Significant
growth recently (10 per year). Fully 50 of
funding goes to SBES (up from 30 5 years ago)
(applied materials modeling), 50,000 euro
projects awarded to PhDs to work in the institute
in topic of their choice.
46Finding 1 (b) Increasing European leadership due
to funding allocation and industrial
participation in education
- Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe
(PRACE) coalition of 15 countries led by
Germany and France, based on the infrastructure
roadmap outlined in the 2006 report of the
European Strategy Forum for Research
Infrastructures. This roadmap aims to install
five petascale systems around Europe beginning in
2009, in addition to national HPC facilities and
regional centers. - TALOS Industry-govmt alliance to accelerate the
development in Europe of new-generation HPC
solutions for large-scale computing systems. - DEISA consortium of 11 leading European national
supercomputing centers to operate a
continent-wide distributed supercomputing
network, similar to TeraGrid in the United States.
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
47Finding 2 New centers and programs for education
and training in SBES all of interdisciplinary
nature
- CBS (BioCentrum-DTU) MSc in Systems Biology and
in Bioinformatics loosely structured, not linked
to any department in particular. Real-time
internet training (all lectures, exercises and
exams), with typically 5050 students
onsiteinternet. International exchange highly
encouraged, students can take their salary and
move anywhere in the globe for half a year. - CIMNE (Barcelona) main especiality is courses
and seminars on the theory and application of
numerical methods in engineering. In last 20
years, CIMNE has organized 100 courses, 300
seminars, 80 national and international
conferences, published 101 books, 15 educational
software 100s of research and technical reports
and journal papers. - ETH Zurich pioneering CSE program (MSc and BSc)
combining several departments, successful with
grads and postdocs taking the senior level
course. - Technical University of Munich and Leibnitz
Supercomputing Center Many CSE programs (i)
BGCE, a Bavaria-wide MSc honors program (ii)
IGSSE postgraduate school (iii) Center for
Simulation Technology in Engineering (iv)
Centre for Computational and Visual Data
exploration (v) International CSE Master program
multidisciplinary involving 7 departments also
allows for industrial internship (iv) Software
project promotes development of software for
HPC/CSE as an educational goal (v) many, many
other programs with other universities and
industry.
48Finding 3 EU and Asian Centers are attracting
more international students from all over the
world (including US)
- Japan International Center for Young Scientists
(Comp. Mat. Science Center Nat. Inst. Mat.
Sc.) English, interdisciplinary, independent
research, high salary, research grant support (5M
yen/year). COE aimed at attracting international
students. Below 120,000 international students
enrolled in Japanese universities, PM wants to
increase number to 300,000. - China 211 and 985 programs to build
world-class universities. 200,000 international
students from 188 countries came in 2007. Main
donors Korea, Japan, US, Vietnam, Thailand - King Abdullah University of Science and
Technology (KAUST) recruiting computational
scientists and engineers at all levels,
attracting best and brightest from Middle East,
India and China. - Australia targeting Malaysia and Taiwan
49Finding 3 EU and Asian Centers are attracting
more international students from all over the
world (including US)
- CBS (BioCentrum-DTU) The internet courses are
used to attract international students (cost 20
more effort but bring lots of money, always
oversubscribed). - CIMNE (Barcelona) (i) introduced an
international course for masters in computational
mechanics for non-European students. This is 1st
year with 30 students. Four universities involved
in this course (Barcelona, Stuttgart, Swansea and
Nantes). (ii) Web environment for distance
learning, also hosting a Master Course in
Numerical methods in Engineering and other
postgraduate courses. (iii) the classrooms
physical spaces for cooperation in education,
research and technology located in Barcelona,
Spain, Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Cuba, Chile,
Brazil, Venezuela and Iran. - ETH Zurich number of international students has
increased dramatically (Asian, Russian). - Vrije University Amsterdam 50 graduate students
come from outside the Netherlands (mainly Eastern
Europe). - LRZ in TUM Munich 80 SBES students in MSc
programs come from abroad Near East, Asia,
Eastern Europe, Central and South America. - United Kingdom ranks 2nd in world (after US) in
attracting international students - Spain, Germany and Italy among others are
capturing more and more of the latin american
student market, which has shifted its traditional
preference for the US in favor of Europe.
50Finding 4 Pitfall of interdisciplinary
education breadth vs depth
- Educational breadth comes at the expense of
educational depth. e.g., in ETH Zurich the CSE
faculty choose physics or chemistry students when
dealing with research issues and CS majors for
software development. General feeling that CSE
students can spend too much time on the format
of the program, without really thinking the
underlying science beneath. - To solve grand challenges in a field, solid
knowledge of core discipline is crucial. - Appropriate evaluation of scientific performance
difficult to come up with credit assignation in
an interdisciplinary endeavor. Also, hidden
innovation phenomena (who gets credit when code
is run by other than author).
51Finding 5 Demand exceeds supply academia vs
industry
- Huge demand for qualified SBES students who get
hired immediately after MSc, dont go into PhDs.
Good to maintain a dynamical market force but
academia would like to see more students that
continue a tradition of free research. - Pharmaceutical, chemical, oil, (micro)electronics,
IT, communications, software companies
automotive and aerospace engineering finance,
insurance, environmental institutions, etc.
52Finding 6 Inadequate education training
threatens global advances in SBES a
worldwide concern
- Insufficient exposure to computational science
engineering and underlying core subjects at high
school and undergraduate level, particularly in
the US - Increased topical specialization beginning with
graduate school - Insufficient training in HPC an educational
gap - Gap b/t domain science courses and CS courses
insufficient continued learning opportunities
related to programming for performance - Most students use codes as black boxes who will
be innovators? - Exception pockets of excellence, ie, TUM,
Stuttgart, Karlsruhe - No real training in software engineering for
sustainable codes - Little training in Uncertainty Quantification,
Validation Verification, risk assessment
decision making
53Education and Training are crucialNext-generatio
n Architectures and Algorithms
- Finding 1 The many orders-of-magnitude in
speedup required to make significant progress in
many disciplines will come from a combination of
synergistic advances in hardware, algorithms, and
software, and thus investment and progress in one
will not pay off without concomitant investments
in the other two. - Finding 2 The US leads both in computer
architectures (multicores, special-purpose
processors, interconnects) and applied algorithms
(e.g., ScaLAPACK, PETSC), but aggressive new
initiatives around the world may undermine this
position. - At present the EU leads the US in theoretical
algorithm development. - Finding 3 The US leads in the development of
next-generation supercomputers, but Japan,
Germany committed, and China now investing in
supercomputing infrastructure.
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
www.wtec.org/sbes
54Education and Training are crucialScientific
and Engineering software developments
- Finding 1 Around the world, SBES relies on
leading edge (supercomputer class) software used
for the most challenging HPC applications,
mid-range computing used by most scientists and
engineers, and everything in between. - Finding 2 Software development leadership in
many SBES disciplines remains largely in US
hands, but in an increasing number of areas it
has passed to foreign rivals, with Europe being
particularly resurgent in software for mid-range
computing, and Japan particularly strong on
high-end supercomputer applications. In some
cases, this leaves the US without access to
critical scientific software. - Finding 3 The greatest threats to US leadership
in SBES come from the lack of reward,
recognition and support concomitant with the long
development times and modest numbers of
publications that go hand-in-hand with software
development the steady erosion of support for
first rate, excellence-based single investigator
or small-group research in the US and the
inadequate training of todays computational
science and engineering students the would-be
scientific software developers of tomorrow..
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
www.wtec.org/sbes
55Opportunities for the US to gain or reinforce
lead in SBES
- Finding 1 There are clear and urgent
opportunities for industry-driven partnerships
with universities and national laboratories to
hardwire scientific discovery to engineering
innovation through SBES. - This would lead to new and better products, as
well as development savings both financially and
in terms of time. - National Academies report on Integrated
Computational Materials Engineering (ICME), which
found a reduction in development time from 10-20
yrs to 2-3 yrs with a concomitant return on
investment of 31 to 91.
www.wtec.org/sbes
56Opportunities for the US to gain or reinforce
lead in SBES
- Finding 2 There is a clear and urgent
opportunity for new mechanisms for supporting
SBES RD. - Support and reward for long-term development of
algorithms, middleware, software, code
maintenance and interoperability. - Although scientific advances achieved through the
use of a large complex code is highly lauded,
the development of the code itself often goes
unrewarded. - Community code development projects are much
stronger within the EU than the US, with national
strategies and long-term support. - investment in math, software, middleware
development always lags behind investment in
hardware
www.wtec.org/sbes
57Opportunities for the US to gain or reinforce
lead in SBES
- Finding 3 There is a clear and urgent
opportunity for a new, modern approach to
educating and training the next generation of
researchers in high performance computing for
scientific discovery and engineering innovation. - Must teach fundamentals, tools, programming for
performance, verification and validation,
uncertainty quantification, risk analysis and
decision making, and programming the next
generation of massively multicore architectures.
Also, students must gain deep knowledge of their
core discipline.
58For more information and final reportwww.wtec.or
g/sbes
59(No Transcript)
60Education and Training WTEC bibliometrics study
- The growth of number of publications in SBES
worldwide is double the number of all SE
publications (5 vs 2.5). - In 2007, US dominated the world SBES output at
27, but China moved 2nd place at (13). - EUR-12 have larger SBES output than US, with
difference increasing over time.
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
www.wtec.org/sbes
61Threats to US leadership in SBES
- We found healthy levels of SBES funding for
company-internal projects, underscoring
industrys recognition of the cost-effectiveness
and timeliness of SBES research. - The mismatch vis a vis the public-sectors
investment level in SBES hinders workforce
development. - We saw many examples of companies (including US
auto and chemical companies) working with EU
groups rather than US groups for better IP
agreements.
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
www.wtec.org/sbes
62Drivers and barriers for HPC usage in
industryUS Council on Competitiveness Report,
2008
- Hurdles There are three systemic barriers to
HPC 1) Lack of application software, 2) access
to talent, 3) Cost constraints (capital,
software, expertise). - Most of firms revealed they have important
problems they can not solve on their desktop
systems. Over 60 of firms would be willing to
pay outside organizations (non-profits,
engineering services companies, or major
universities) for realizing the benefits of HPC. - The survey implications are sobering critical
U.S. supply chains and the leadership of many
U.S. industries may be at risk if more companies
do not embrace modeling and simulation with HPC.
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
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63Key Study Findings Major Thematic Areas
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C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
64Key Findings Life Sciences Medicine
- Predictive biosimulation is here.
- Pan-SBES synergy argues for a focused investment
of SBES as a discipline. - Worldwide SBES capabilities in life sciences and
medicine are threatened by lack of sustained
investment and loss of human resources.
65Key Findings Materials
- Computational MSE is changing how new materials
are discovered, developed, and applied, from the
macroscale to the nanoscale. - World-class research exists in all areas of
materials simulation in the US, EU, and Asia the
US leads in some, but not all, of the most
strategic of these. - The US ability to innovate and develop the most
advanced materials simulation codes and tools in
strategic areas is eroding.
66Key Findings Energy Sustainability
- In the area of transportation fuels, SBES is
critical to stretch the supply and find other
sources. - In the discovery and innovation of alternative
energy sources including biofuels, batteries,
solar, wind, nuclear SBES is critical for the
discovery and design of new materials and
processes. - Petascale computing will allow unprecedented
breakthroughs in sustainability and the
simulation of ultra-large-scale sustainable
systems, from ecosystems to power grids to whole
societies.
67Key Study Findings Cross-Cutting Issues
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C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
68Key Findings Next-generation Architectures and
Algorithms
- Finding 1 The many orders-of-magnitude in
speedup required to make significant progress in
many disciplines will come from a combination of
synergistic advances in hardware, algorithms, and
software, and thus investment and progress in one
will not pay off without concomitant investments
in the other two.
69Key Findings Next-generation Architectures and
Algorithms
- Finding 2 The US leads both in computer
architectures (multicores, special-purpose
processors, interconnects) and applied algorithms
(e.g., ScaLAPACK, PETSC), but aggressive new
initiatives around the world may undermine this
position. - Already, the EU leads the US in theoretical
algorithm development, and has for some time. - Finding 3 The US leads in the development of
next-generation supercomputers, but Japan,
Germany committed, and China now investing in
supercomputing infrastructure.
70European Initiatives
- A new European initiative called Partnership for
Advanced Computing in Europe (PRACE) has been
formed based on the infrastructure roadmap
outlined in the 2006 report of the European
Strategy Forum for Research Infrastructures
(ESFRI 2006). This roadmap involves 15 different
countries and aims to install five petascale
systems around Europe beginning in 2009 (Tier-0),
in addition to national high-performance
computing (HPC) facilities and regional centers
(Tiers 1 and 2, respectively). The estimated
construction cost is 400 million, with running
costs estimated at about 100200 million per
year. The overall goal of the PRACE initiative is
to prepare a European structure to fund and
operate a permanent Tier-0 infrastructure and to
promote European presence and competitiveness in
HPC. Germany and France appear to be the leading
countries.
71European Initiatives
- Recently, several organizations and companies,
including Bull, CEA, the German National High
Performance Computing Center (HLRS), Intel, and
Quadrics, announced the creation of the TALOS
alliance (http//www.talos.org/) to accelerate
the development in Europe of new-generation HPC
solutions for large-scale computing systems. In
addition, in 2004 eleven leading European
national supercomputing centers formed a
consortium, DEISA, to operate a continent-wide
distributed supercomputing network. Similar to
TeraGrid in the United States, the DEISA grid
(http//www.deisa.eu) in Europe connects most of
Europes supercomputing centers with a mix of
1-gigabit and 10-gigabit lines.
72Key Findings Scientific Engineering Software
Development
- Finding 1 Around the world, SBES relies on
leading edge (supercomputer class) software used
for the most challenging HPC applications,
mid-range computing used by most scientists and
engineers, and everything in between.
73Key Findings Scientific Engineering Software
Development
- Finding 2 Software development leadership in
many SBES disciplines remains largely in US
hands, but in an increasing number of areas it
has passed to foreign rivals, with Europe being
particularly resurgent in software for mid-range
computing, and Japan particularly strong on
high-end supercomputer applications. In some
cases, this leaves the US without access to
critical scientific software.
74Key Findings Scientific Engineering Software
Development
- Finding 3 The greatest threats to US leadership
in SBES come from the lack of reward,
recognition and support concomitant with the long
development times and modest numbers of
publications that go hand-in-hand with software
development the steady erosion of support for
first rate, excellence-based single investigator
or small-group research in the US and the
inadequate training of todays computational
science and engineering students the would-be
scientific software developers of tomorrow.
75Key Findings Multiscale Modeling and Simulation
- Finding 2 The lack of code interoperability is
a major impediment to industrys ability to link
single-scale codes into a multiscale framework. - Finding 3 Although U.S. on par with Japan and
Europe, MMS is diffuse, lacking focus and
integration, and federal agencies have not
traditionally supported the development of codes
that can be distributed, supported, and
successfully used by others. - Contrast with Japan and Europe, where large,
interdisciplinary teams are supported long term
to distribute codes either in open-source or
commercial form.
76Key Findings Engineering Simulation
- Finding 1 Software and data interoperability,
visualization, and algorithms that outlast
hardware obstruct more effective use of
engineering simulation. - Finding 2 Links between physical and system
level simulations remain weak. There is little
evidence of atom-to-enterprise models that are
coupled tightly with process and device models
and thus an absence of multi-scale SBES to
inform strategic decision-making directions.
77Key Findings Engineering Simulation
- Finding 3 Although US academia and industry are,
on the whole, ahead (marginally) of their
European and Asian counterparts in the use of
engineering simulation, pockets of excellence
exist in Europe and Asia that are more advanced
than US groups, and Europe is leading in training
the next generation of engineering simulation
experts.
78Key Findings Validation, Verification
Uncertainty Quantification
- Finding 1 Overall, the United States leads the
research efforts today, at least in terms of
volume, in quantifying uncertainty however,
there are similar recent initiatives in Europe.
79Key Findings Validation, Verification
Uncertainty Quantification
- Finding 2 Although the U.S. DOD and DOE are been
leaders in VV and UQ efforts, they have been
limited primarily to high-level systems
engineering and computational physics
mechanics, with most of the mathematical
developments occurring in universities by small
numbers of researchers. In contrast, several
large European initiatives stress UQ-related
activities. - Finding 3 Existing graduate level curricula,
worldwide, do not teach stochastic modeling and
simulation in any systematic way.
80Key Findings Big Data, Visualization, and
Data-Driven Simulation
- Finding 1 The biological sciences and the
particle physics communities are pushing the
envelope in large-scale data management and
visualization methods. In contrast, the chemical
and material science communities lag in
prioritization of investments in data
infrastructure. - Bio appreciates importance of integrated,
community-wide infrastructure for massive amounts
of data, data provenance, heterogeneous data,
analysis of data and network inference from data.
Great opportunities for the chemical and
materials communities to move in a similar
direction, with the promise of huge impacts on
the manufacturing sector.
81Key Findings Big Data, Visualization, and
Data-Driven Simulation
- Finding 2 Industry is significantly ahead of
academia with respect to data management
infrastructure, supply chain, and workflow.
82Key Findings Big Data, Visualization, and
Data-Driven Simulation
- Most universities lack campus-wide strategy for
big data. - Widening gap between the data infrastructure
needs of the current generation of students and
the campus IT infrastructure. - Industry active in consortia to promote open
standards for data exchange a recognition that
SBES is not a series of point solutions but
integrated set of tools that form a workflow
engine. - Companies in highly regulated industries, e.g.,
biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies, are
also exploring open standards and data exchange
to expedite the regulatory review processes for
new products.
83Key Findings Big Data, Visualization, and
Data-Driven Simulation
- Finding 3 Big data and visualization
capabilities are inextricably linked, and the
coming data tsunami made possible by petascale
computing will require more extreme visualization
capabilities than are currently available, as
well as appropriately trained students who are
adept with data infrastructure issues. - Finding 4 Big data, visualization and dynamic
data-driven simulations are crucial technology
elements in grand challenges, including
production of transportation fuels from the last
remaining giant oil fields.
84Inadequate education training threatens global
advances in SBES a worldwide concern
- Insufficient exposure to computational science
engineering and underlying core subjects at high
school and undergraduate level - Increased topical specialization beginning with
graduate school - Insufficient training in HPC an educational
gap - Gap b/t domain science courses and CS courses
insufficient continued learning opportunities
related to programming for performance - Major worry for multicore/gpu architectures in US
- Students use codes as black boxes who will be
innovators? - No real training in software engineering for
sustainable codes - Little training in UQ, VV, risk assessment
decision making - Necessary for atoms to enterprise US lead slim
S.C. Glotzer 01/29/09
MASI Conference, Helsinki, Finland
www.wtec.org/sbes
85Key Findings Education Training
- Finding Continued progress and U.S. leadership
in SBES and the disciplines it supports are at
great risk due to a profound and growing scarcity
of appropriately trained students with the
knowledge and skills needed to be the next
generation of SBES innovators. - Current background training is insufficient.
- The U.S. lead in many areas is decreasing across
all SE indicators - U.S. doctorates in SE lt EU or Asia.
- Fierce competition for international recruiting.
- New interdisciplinary education programs in EU
86Opportunities for the US to gain or reinforce
lead in SBES
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C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
87Opportunities for the US to gain or reinforce
lead in SBES
- Finding 1 There are clear and urgent
opportunities for industry-driven partnerships
with universities and national laboratories to
hardwire scientific discovery to engineering
innovation through SBES. - This would lead to new and better products, as
well as development savings both financially and
in terms of time. - National Academies report on Integrated
Computational Materials Engineering (ICME), which
found a reduction in development time from 10-20
yrs to 2-3 yrs with a concomitant return on
investment of 31 to 91.
88Opportunities for the US to gain or reinforce
lead in SBES
- Finding 2 There is a clear and urgent
opportunity for new mechanisms for supporting
SBES RD. - Support and reward for long-term development of
algorithms, middleware, software, code
maintenance and interoperability. - Although scientific advances achieved through the
use of a large complex code is highly lauded,
the development of the code itself often goes
unrewarded. - Community code development projects are much
stronger within the EU than the US, with national
strategies and long-term support. - investment in math, software, middleware
development always lags behind investment in
hardware
89Opportunities for the US to gain or reinforce
lead in SBES
- Finding 3 There is a clear and urgent
opportunity for a new, modern approach to
educating and training the next generation of
researchers in high performance computing for
scientific discovery and engineering innovation. - Must teach fundamentals, tools, programming for
performance, verification and validation,
uncertainty quantification, risk analysis and
decision making, and programming the next
generation of massively multicore architectures.
Also, students must gain deep knowledge of their
core discipline.
90For more information and final reportwww.wtec.or
g/sbes
C. Sagui and S.C. Glotzer
SIAM, CSE09
www.wtec.org/sbes