Tom W. Fredian
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Tom W. Fredian.
Journal of Grid Computing | 2006
Justin Burruss; Tom W. Fredian; Mary R. Thompson
The Resource Oriented Authorization Manager (ROAM) was created to provide a simple but flexible authorization system for the FusionGrid computational Grid. ROAM builds on and extends previous community efforts by both responding to access authorization requests and by providing a Web interface for resource management. ROAM works with the Globus Resource Allocation Manager (GRAM), and is general enough to be used by other virtual organizations that use Globus middleware or X.509/TLS authentication schemes to secure a Grid of distributed resources. In addition to describing ROAM, this paper discusses the basic design parameters of a Grid authorization system and the reasons for the choices made in the ROAM design.
Fusion Engineering and Design | 2002
David P. Schissel; A. Finkelstein; Ian T. Foster; Tom W. Fredian; M. Greenwald; C.D. Hansen; C.R. Johnson; Katarzyna Keahey; S.A. Klasky; K. Li; D.C. McCune; Qian Peng; R. Stevens; Mary R. Thompson
The long-term vision of the Fusion Collaboratory described in this paper is to transform fusion research and accelerate scientific understanding and innovation so as to revolutionize the design of a fusion energy source. The Collaboratory will create and deploy collaborative software tools that will enable more efficient utilization of existing experimental facilities and more effective integration of experiment, theory, and modeling. The computer science research necessary to create the Collaboratory is centered on three activities: security, remote and distributed computing, and scientific visualization. It is anticipated that the presently envisioned Fusion Collaboratory software tools will require 3 years to complete.
challenges of large applications in distributed environments | 2005
Justin Burruss; Tom W. Fredian; Mary R. Thompson
Since inception in 2001, FusionGrid developers have worked to secure computational resources in a multi-institutional environment with geographically dispersed users. Recent improvements to grid security have streamlined the usage and administration of resources. More than simply increasing security, these improvements have made FusionGrid security easier for resource administrators and the fusion scientists that use FusionGrid, allowing them to get work done with minimal inconvenience. Improvements in authentication, authorization, and data handling have been welcomed by fusion scientists and promise to ease the burden of adding new resources to the grid.
Archive | 2012
David P. Schissel; G. Abla; Justin Burruss; Eliot Feibush; Tom W. Fredian; M. M. Goode; M. Greenwald; Katarzyna Keahey; Ti Leggett; K. Li; D. McCune; Michael E. Papka; Lewis Randerson; A. Sanderson; J. Stillerman; Mary R. Thompson; T. Uram; G. Wallace
This report summarizes the work of the University of Utah, which was a member of the National Fusion Collaboratory (NFC) Project funded by the United States Department of Energy (DOE) under the Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing Program (SciDAC) to develop a persistent infrastructure to enable scientific collaboration for magnetic fusion research. A five year project that was initiated in 2001, it the NFC built on the past collaborative work performed within the U.S. fusion community and added the component of computer science research done with the USDOE Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computer Research. The project was itself a collaboration, itself uniting fusion scientists from General Atomics, MIT, and PPPL and computer scientists from ANL, LBNL, and Princeton University, and the University of Utah to form a coordinated team. The group leveraged existing computer science technology where possible and extended or created new capabilities where required. The complete finial report is attached as an addendum. The In the collaboration, the primary technical responsibility of the University of Utah in the collaboration was to develop and deploy an advanced scientific visualization service. To achieve this goal, the SCIRun Problem Solving Environment (PSE) is used on FusionGrid for an advanced scientific visualization service. SCIRun is open source software that gives the user the ability to create complex 3D visualizations and 2D graphics. This capability allows for the exploration of complex simulation results and the comparison of simulation and experimental data. SCIRun on FusionGrid gives the scientist a no-license-cost visualization capability that rivals present day commercial visualization packages. To accelerate the usage of SCIRun within the fusion community, a stand-alone application built on top of SCIRun was developed and deployed. This application, FusionViewer, allows users who are unfamiliar with SCIRun to quickly create visualizations and perform analysis of their simulation data from either the MDSplus data storage environment or from locally stored HDF5 files. More advanced tools for visualization and analysis also were created in collaboration with the SciDAC Center for Extended MHD Modeling. Versions of SCIRun with the FusionViewer have been made available to fusion scientists on the Mac OS X, Linux, and other Unix based platforms and have been downloaded 1163 times. SCIRun has been used with NIMROD, M3D, BOUT fusion simulation data as well as simulation data from other SciDAC application areas (e.g., Astrophysics). The subsequent visualization results - including animations - have been incorporated into invited talks at multiple APS/DPP meetings as well as peer reviewed journal articles. As an example, SCIRun was used for the visualization and analysis of a NIMROD simulation of a disruption that occurred in a DIII-D experiment. The resulting animations and stills were presented as part of invited talks at APS/DPP meetings and the SC04 conference in addition to being highlighted in the NIH/NSF Visualization Research Challenges Report. By achieving its technical goals, the University of Utah played a key role in the successful development of a persistent infrastructure to enable scientific collaboration for magnetic fusion research. Many of the visualization tools developed as part of the NFC continue to be used by Fusion and other SciDAC application scientists and are currently being supported and expanded through follow-on up on SciDAC projects (Visualization and Analytics Center for Enabling Technology, and the Visualization and Analysis in Support of Fusion SAP).
grid computing | 2002
Katarzyna Keahey; Tom W. Fredian; Qian Peng; David P. Schissel; Mary R. Thompson; Ian T. Foster; M. Greenwald; D. McCune
Fusion Engineering and Design | 2004
D.P. Schissel; Justin Burruss; A. Finkelstein; S.M. Flanagan; Ian T. Foster; Tom W. Fredian; M. Greenwald; C.R Johnson; Katarzyna Keahey; S.A. Klasky; K. Li; D. McCune; Michael E. Papka; Qian Peng; L Randerson; A Sanderson; J. Stillerman; R. Stevens; Mary R. Thompson; G Wallace
Fusion Engineering and Design | 2006
Tom W. Fredian; J. Stillerman
Fusion Engineering and Design | 2006
Justin Burruss; Tom W. Fredian; Mary R. Thompson
Fusion Engineering and Design | 2011
Denis Stepanov; G. Abla; D.J. Ciarlette; Tom W. Fredian; M. Greenwald; D.P. Schissel; J. Stillerman
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | 2005
Justin Burruss; Tom W. Fredian; Mary R. Thompson