
Students in the Numerical Methods for Supercomputers course at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP) used five DEC workstations to visualize the output of programs submitted to a Cray at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC). The DECstations were funded by National Science Foundation grant number USE-9151091 through their Instrumentation and Laboratory Improvement program.
The course was taught using the funded DECstation network for the first time in Spring 1992. Students had computer accounts on IUP's DECstations, IUP's Vax Cluster, the PSC's DECstations, the PSC's Vaxes, and the PSC's Cray YMP. Students used the DECstations' windowing, networking, and multitasking capabilities to freely work on several of these computers simultaneously.
In three of the students' assignments, they generated animated graphical output from their numerical results. In order to become familiar with the process, the first graphics assignment required only that the students run a program that the instructor had written to generate graphical output. In the second assignment students used numerical integration to simulate carbon diffusing through an iron rod and then they animated the diffusion process, with color representing concentration of carbon. In the third assignment, students numerically approximated the solution to the Poisson equation to model the temperature distribution in a rectangular steel plate. From the numerical temperature distribution, they created a color contour plot, with color representing temperature. Several of the students also animated the iterative scheme for solving the system of linear equations. All of the student animations were recorded on video tape at the PSC.
These experiences exposed students to the computing environment of scientific researchers. Many of the students subsequently entered graduate programs or industrial jobs in which they used high performance computing, scientific visualization, or networked workstation environments.
You may also be interested in some of the following teaching materials.
Programs |
People |
Courses |
Facilities |
Calendars |
Projects |
Jobs
Read this
disclaimer.
Maintained by
H. Edward Donley
<hedonley@grove.iup.edu>
Last Modified on Monday, 13-Aug-2001 16:55:25 EDT