Scientific research is facing a revolution caused by increases in
computational power and methods, according to leading academics.
Professor Omar Ghattas, from the Department of Mechanical Engineering and
Geological Sciences at the
University
Of Texas, said that historic opportunities have arisen to solve some of the
world's biggest problems using new computational power.
"There is a coming golden age of computational science in which the 21st
century will witness solutions to grand challenges in society," he said at the
King
Abdullah University of Science & Technology (Kaust) IT summit in Dharha,
Saudi Arabia.
"This has not yet happened because the causes of the problems are complex and
non-linear and cannot be addressed without maths modelling and computer
simulations. It just cannot be done by traditional methods like observation."
Professor Ghattas explained that the academic community is building a "
perfect storm" of low-cost computer hardware, better software and improved
mathematical algorithms.
Combined with more accurate mathematical models, this 'storm' will prompt
radical changes in research. "This is something that Kaust could capitalise on,
" he said.
"It is a great opportunity to seize leadership, and the cost is very small.
You can buy a petascale system for $50m, which is nothing in comparison to the
Large Hadron Collider. It is barely 50 Superbowl ads!"
Professor Ghattas added that the new Kaust university had a unique
opportunity to encourage interdisciplinary research, and that too many
universities are locked into departments that never work together.
Other academics agreed that computation systems will become increasingly vit
al to future scientific research, as the sheer volume of data is making
high-level computing a must.
"You cannot do climate modelling or map galaxies without large scale
computing power," said Dr Dan Reed, director of the
Renaissance
Computing Institute. "Scientists are drowning in data and computer science
is necessary to help."
Dr Reed explained that over the next 10 years research will not be published
in academic journals, but will go online and be supported by data stores and
wikis from other scientists who could share the data to make new discoveries.
"The way of publishing papers is ridiculous," said Dr Werner Vogels, chief
technology officer at
Amazon.
"Only successful research is published and we learn the most from failed
research. These blogs and wikis would go a long way to helping progress."
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