Sun is providing servers, computer network switches and software to the university at a steep discount over normal academic pricing, through its "Sun Centers of Excellence" program.
"The new center greatly enhances our capabilities for performing state-of-the-art computational studies impacting research in many different disciplines. UC Davis is very fortunate to have Sun Microsystems as a partner in harnessing information technology to tackle society's most pressing needs," said Barry Klein, vice chancellor for research at UC Davis.
The new center will establish a distributed, or "grid," computing environment at UC Davis. Grid computing allows researchers to access and share the resources of many different computers, servers, databases and information stores regardless of their physical location. The campus already has a number of "cluster" computing systems, where numbers of identical computers are wired together to
function as a single powerful computer. Grid computing will allow these clusters to work together.
"University researchers can benefit substantially from having access to such a distributed computing infrastructure," said Bernd Hamann, professor of computer science and associate vice chancellor for research at UC Davis.
Research that will benefit from the center includes: developing
computational models to predict earthquakes; using distributed
networks of environmental sensors to address problems such as transportation, natural disasters and climate change; creating "virtual reality" environments and powerful data analysis technology that allows scientists to interpret their data; and studies in genomics and bioinformatics.
The computing grid created by the center will allow researchers in these groups to easily access and use each others' resources, Hamann said.