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  A DOE Office of Science User Facility
  at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
 

Bridging the Gap between Climate and Weather

reanalysis of historic storm

The distinction between climate and weather was expressed most succinctly by science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein: “Climate is what you expect; weather is what you get.” But as global warming produces more noticeable changes on a planetary scale, how do we even know what to expect in a particular region?  [MORE]
NERSC is the flagship scientific computing facility for the Office of Science in the U.S. Department of Energy and a world leader in accelerating scientific discovery through computation. NERSC is located at Berkeley Lab in Berkeley, California.

News

March Issue of NERSC News

Featured stories in the latest issue of NERSC News include:

  • Research into DNA behavior during cell replication.
  • Energy-efficient computing research.
  • Statistics for 2008 project allocations.
  • Staff exchange with Swiss National Computing Centre
[MORE]

Now Computing

A small sample of computations taking place on NERSC supercomputers right now.
ProjectMachineProcessors
Quantum Chromodynamics with three flavors of dynamical quarks Franklin 3,072
Modeling Dynamically and Spatially Complex Materials Franklin 3,008
The 20th Century Reanalysis Project Franklin 2,464
Thermonuclear Supernovae: Stellar Explosions in Three Dimensions Franklin 1,208
Molecular Dynameomics Bassi 384
Theoretical studies of combustion dynamics Jacquard 64
Simulated protostellar core

High-Mass Star Formation

The formation of high-mass stars remains one of the most significant unsolved problems in astrophysics

These stars, with masses from 10 to 100 times the mass of our sun, eventually explode as supernovae and produce most of the heavy elements in the Universe. They also have a major influence on the structure and evolution of galaxies. But observing the formation of massive stars is difficult, because they are born in distant, dense, and dusty regions of space, and they swallow up much of their birth environment as they are born.

[Article]


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