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Meeting Abstracts American Geophysical Union

Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics (CIG)

Gurnis, M - Seismo Lab, Caltech, Pasadena, CA 91125 United States
Kellogg, L H - Dept. Geology, Univ. California, Davis, CA 95616 United States
Bloxham, J - Earth and Planetary Sci., Harvard, Cambridge, CA 02138 United States
Hager, B H - EAPS, MIT, Cambridge, CA 02139 United States
Spiegelman, M - Dept. Applied Physics and Applied Math, Columbia Univ., New York, NY 10027
Willett, S - Dept. Earth and Space Sci., Univ. Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 United States
Wysession, M E - Earth and Planetary Sci.Dept., Washington U., St. Louis, MO 63130 United States
Aivazis, M - CACR, Caltech, Pasadena, CA 91125 United States

Solid earth geophysicists have a long tradition of writing scientific software to address a wide range of problems. In particular, computer simulations came into wide use in geophysics during the decade after the plate tectonic revolution. Solution schemes and numerical algorithms that developed in other areas of science, most notably engineering, fluid mechanics, and physics, were adapted with considerable success to geophysics. This software has largely been the product of individual efforts and although this approach has proven successful, its strength for solving problems of interest is now starting to show its limitations as we try to share codes and algorithms or when we want to recombine codes in novel ways to produce new science. With funding from the NSF, the US community has embarked on a Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics (CIG) that will develop, support, and disseminate community-accessible software for the greater geodynamics community from model developers to end-users. The software is being developed for problems involving mantle and core dynamics, crustal and earthquake dynamics, magma migration, seismology, and other related topics. With a high level of community participation, CIG is leveraging state-of-the-art scientific computing into a suite of open-source tools and codes. The infrastructure that we are now starting to develop will consist of: (a) a coordinated effort to develop reusable, well-documented and open-source geodynamics software; (b) the basic building blocks - an infrastructure layer - of software by which state-of-the-art modeling codes can be quickly assembled; (c) extension of existing software frameworks to interlink multiple codes and data through a superstructure layer; (d) strategic partnerships with the larger world of computational science and geoinformatics; and (e) specialized training and workshops for both the geodynamics and broader Earth science communities. The CIG initiative has already started to leverage and develop long-term strategic partnerships with open source development efforts within the larger thrusts of scientific computing and geoinformatics. These strategic partnerships are essential as the frontier has moved into multi-scale and multi-physics problems in which many investigators now want to use simulation software for data interpretation, data assimilation, and hypothesis testing.

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