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Computational Science — ICCS 2003 [electronic resource] : International Conference, Melbourne, Australia and St. Petersburg, Russia, June 2–4, 2003. Proceedings, Part III /

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 2659Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2003Edition: 1st ed. 2003Description: CX, 1168 p. 486 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540448631
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 004.0151 23
LOC classification:
  • QA75.5-76.95
Online resources:
Contents:
Track on Applications -- Track on Clusters and Grids -- Track on Models and Algorithms -- Track on Web Engineering -- Track on Networking -- Track on Parallel Methods and Systems -- Track on Data Mining -- Workshop on Parallel Linear Algebra (WoPLA03) -- Workshop on Java in Computational Science -- Workshop on Computational Earthquake Physics and Solid Earth System Simulation -- Workshop on Performance Evalution, Modeling, and Analysis of Scientific Applications on Large-Scale Systems -- Workshop on Scientific Visualization and Human-Machine Interaction in a Problem Solving Environment -- Workshop on Innovative Solutions for Grid Computing.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: Some of the most challenging problems in science and engineering are being addressed by the integration of computation and science, a research ?eld known as computational science. Computational science plays a vital role in fundamental advances in biology, physics, chemistry, astronomy, and a host of other disciplines. This is through the coordination of computation, data management, access to instrumentation, knowledge synthesis, and the use of new devices. It has an impact on researchers and practitioners in the sciences and beyond. The sheer size of many challenges in computational science dictates the use of supercomputing, parallel and distri- ted processing, grid-based processing, advanced visualization and sophisticated algorithms. At the dawn of the 21st century the series of International Conferences on Computational Science (ICCS) was initiated with a ?rst meeting in May 2001 in San Francisco. The success of that meeting motivated the organization of the - cond meeting held in Amsterdam April 21–24, 2002, where over 500 participants pushed the research ?eld further. The International Conference on Computational Science 2003 (ICCS 2003) is the follow-up to these earlier conferences. ICCS 2003 is unique, in that it was a single event held at two di?erent sites almost opposite each other on the globe – Melbourne, Australia and St. Petersburg, Russian Federation. The conference ran on the same dates at both locations and all the presented work was published in a single set of proceedings, which you hold in your hands right now.
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Track on Applications -- Track on Clusters and Grids -- Track on Models and Algorithms -- Track on Web Engineering -- Track on Networking -- Track on Parallel Methods and Systems -- Track on Data Mining -- Workshop on Parallel Linear Algebra (WoPLA03) -- Workshop on Java in Computational Science -- Workshop on Computational Earthquake Physics and Solid Earth System Simulation -- Workshop on Performance Evalution, Modeling, and Analysis of Scientific Applications on Large-Scale Systems -- Workshop on Scientific Visualization and Human-Machine Interaction in a Problem Solving Environment -- Workshop on Innovative Solutions for Grid Computing.

Some of the most challenging problems in science and engineering are being addressed by the integration of computation and science, a research ?eld known as computational science. Computational science plays a vital role in fundamental advances in biology, physics, chemistry, astronomy, and a host of other disciplines. This is through the coordination of computation, data management, access to instrumentation, knowledge synthesis, and the use of new devices. It has an impact on researchers and practitioners in the sciences and beyond. The sheer size of many challenges in computational science dictates the use of supercomputing, parallel and distri- ted processing, grid-based processing, advanced visualization and sophisticated algorithms. At the dawn of the 21st century the series of International Conferences on Computational Science (ICCS) was initiated with a ?rst meeting in May 2001 in San Francisco. The success of that meeting motivated the organization of the - cond meeting held in Amsterdam April 21–24, 2002, where over 500 participants pushed the research ?eld further. The International Conference on Computational Science 2003 (ICCS 2003) is the follow-up to these earlier conferences. ICCS 2003 is unique, in that it was a single event held at two di?erent sites almost opposite each other on the globe – Melbourne, Australia and St. Petersburg, Russian Federation. The conference ran on the same dates at both locations and all the presented work was published in a single set of proceedings, which you hold in your hands right now.

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