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The Leading Source for Global News and Information from the evolving Grid ecosystem,
including Grid, SOA, Virtualization, Storage, Networking and Service-Oriented IT |
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August 27, 2007
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Teenagers may not have heard about it, but there's a Web 2.0 site that's a hit with scientists and engineers.
nanoHUB.org,
a so-called science gateway for nano-science and nanotechnology housed
at Purdue University, is taking the tools of Web 2.0 and applying them,
along with a few tricks of its own, to further nano-scholarly pursuits.
The
result is a Web site that is a required bookmark for people who get
excited about algorithms, carbon nanotubes, nanoelectronics and quantum
dots -- the current hot topics on the site.
Soon, other science disciplines, such as pharmacy and medical research, will be launched using the same technology.
Gerhard
Klimeck, a professor of electrical and computing engineering and lead
of the nanoHUB project, says the site gives scientists and students
access to resources that they would otherwise have to learn to use.
"I'm
a computer scientist, so you can give me a UNIX account and a password,
and I'm good to go," Klimeck says. "But others would take weeks to
learn how to use these tools. In nanoHUB, if you know the science you
can begin to use the tools immediately. nanoHUB puts scientific tools
into the hands of people who wouldn't normally touch them with a
10-foot pole."
Use of nanoHUB has increased fivefold over the
past two years, and there are currently more than 24,000 users. That's
small compared to the number of Facebook or Linkedin users, but it
still represents a significant slice of the nanotechnology community.
Peter
Osterberg, an associate professor of engineering at the University of
Portland, lists nanoHUB on his Web site as "The best darned nanotech
Web site on Earth."
"Yes, I am very enthusiastic about
nanoHUB.org," Osterberg says. "My students thoroughly enjoy the
nanoelectronics course material along with the online simulations. I
use it almost daily since I first learned about it."
The nanoHUB
is a project of the National Science Foundation-funded Network for
Computational Nanotechnology, a consortium of research universities,
government agencies and corporate research labs.
Ian Foster, the
University of Chicago's Arthur Holly Compton Distinguished Service
Professor of Computer Science, director of the Computation Institute at
Argonne National Laboratory and the person sometimes labeled the father
of grid computing, says nanoHUB is one of the underappreciated
successes of the United States' cyberinfrastructure.
"By
focusing on the immediate needs of researchers, educators and students
in nanotechnology, nanoHUB has pioneered methods that have allowed
thousands of users to benefit," Foster says.
Michael McLennan, a
senior research scientist for the Office of Information Technology at
Purdue, says that just as Google is famously powered by its secret
algorithms, the secret sauce of nanoHUB is a software application that
is between the supercomputers at national research facilities that
power the site and the Web interface. This "middleware," named
Maxwell's Daemon, also finds available computing resources on national
science grids and sends job requests to those computers faster than the
blink of an eye.
"Maxwell is actually running back here at
Purdue and reaching out to high-performance computing resources on the
TeraGrid and other science grids across the nation," McLennan says.
"This middleware is more sophisticated than running a Java applet in
the Web browser."
nanoHUB is the first of several planned science hubs housed at Purdue.
"Eventually
we will release Maxwell as open-source software once we test it,
package it and write documentation for it," McLennan says. "However,
there are still groups that don't want to build their own hubs, even
with the middleware, and we are contracting with those groups to build
hubs for them."
On nanoHUB, nanotechnology researchers can share software tools, lectures and presentations, or other resources.
"We
have a self-serve process where scientists can upload the resources,"
McLennan says. "It's not quite as easy as adding a bookmark to
del.icio.us, but more like purchasing something on amazon.com."
The nanoHUB takes advantage of several Web 2.0 technologies:
The real stars of nanoHUB are its simulation
tools. So far, 55 nanosimulation software tools have been made
available through the site for subjects such as nanoelectronics,
chemistry and physics. These tools allow researchers to change data or
views of their simulations and see real-time changes. In the last 12
months, there have been more than 225,000 such simulations run on
nanoHUB.
"You can run simulations and easily compare results,
which is something you can't do with simulation tools normally,"
McLennan says. "You can see characteristics, such as how electrons flow
through a nanotube, and easily download the data. These types of
simulations are critically important to many industries and areas of
research, such as in semiconductors or biomedical devices."
The
one Web 2.0 technology nanoHUB is lacking is a way to connect
colleagues into a social network. McLennan says they have tried a few
social networking tools on nanoHUB, but none have proved to be as
popular as the scientific tools.
"We don't seem to have the
recipe right so that the scientists and engineers want to chat about
themselves," he says. "On the other hand, we're not trying to be
Facebook or Wikipedia. We're trying to make scientific tools available
online, and we're succeeding."
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Source: Purdue University