2000
[DOCID: f:s193is.txt]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 193
To authorize funding for Advanced Scientific Research Computing
Programs at the Department of Energy for fiscal years 2002 through
2006, and for other purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
January 29, 2001
Mr. Bingaman (for himself, Mr. Craig, Mr. Schumer, and Mrs. Murray)
introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To authorize funding for Advanced Scientific Research Computing
Programs at the Department of Energy for fiscal years 2002 through
2006, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as ``Department of Energy Advanced Scientific
Computing Act''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
The Congress finds the following:
(1) The Department of Energy and its Office of Science
research programs has played an important role in the
development of high performance computing, networking, and
information technology. These capabilities have been readily
accessible to the U.S. scientific community for a diverse set
of grand challenge scientific computational problems.
Contributions by the Department include pioneering the concept
of remote, interactive access to supercomputers (developing the
first interactive operating system for supercomputers,
establishing the first national supercomputer center);
developing the mathematical foundations for high performance
computing with numerical linear algebra libraries used
worldwide; leading the transition to massively parallel
supercomputing by developing software to allow processors to
communicate with each other; and contributing to the
development of the Internet with software that dramatically
speeds up the transmission of messages.
(2) The Department of Energy's Office of Science's
contributions to networking and information technology have
played a key role in its ability to accomplish its statutory
mission to promote the basic sciences critical to the Nation's
energy future through the development of remote access to its
shared computing and experimental facilities. Particular users
of the computing facilities have been high energy physicists
who model electromagnetic fields and beam dynamics in
accelerators, materials scientists who model and design
materials using computational techniques, chemists who model
the chemical processes involved in combustion, atmospheric
scientists who model global climate patterns, geologists who
model ground transport of fluids and waste, and biologists who
want to predict protein structures. Continued accomplishments
in these areas will be needed to continue to carry out future
DOE missions.
(3) The Department of Energy has unique multi-disciplinary
facilities for advancing basic and applied science which
include the high energy and nuclear laboratories, neutron
sources and synchrotron facilities, and advanced computing and
communications facilities such as the National Energy Research
Scientific Computing Center, the Advanced Computing Research
Facilities, and the Energy Sciences Network. Each facility when
networked to share large amounts of scientific data will better
be able to advance the fundamental understanding in their
respective areas as well as the overall networking and
information technology infrastructure for the Nation.
(4) Many challenges are associated with modeling complex
physical, chemical, and biological phenomena, especially on
massively parallel computers with peak speeds in hundreds of
teraflops (100 trillion arithmetic operations per second).
These challenges include the management and analysis of
petabyte-scale data sets. A program to address these challenges
will require multi-disciplinary collaborations between
theoretical and computational scientists, computer scientists,
and applied mathematicians at universities, national
laboratories, and industry. Such a program will enhance the
ability of DOE to meet its mission goals and advance the state
of the art for the U.S. economic and industrial base in the
fields of energy, geology, genetics, chemical processing,
electronics and transportation.
(5) Solving the challenges facing the Department of Energy
in developing and using high-performance computing, networking,
and information technologies will be of immense value to the
Nation. Potential benefits include: reliable prediction of the
Earth's climate as well as the performance of energy systems;
understanding aging and fatigue effects in materials crucial to
energy and transportation systems; promoting energy-efficient
chemical production through improved chemical processes,
including rational catalyst design; predicting the structure
and functions of the proteins coded by DNA and their response
to chemical and radiation damage; designing more efficient
combustion systems; and understanding turbulent flow in plasmas
in energy and advanced materials applications.
SEC. 3. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY PROGRAM.
(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Energy, through the Office of
Science, shall support a program to advance the Nation's computing
capability across a diverse set of grand challenge computationally
based science problems.
(b) Duties of the Office of Science.--In carrying out the program
under this Act, the Director of the Office shall--
(1) advance basic science through computation by developing
software to solve grand challenge science problems on new
generations of computing platforms,
(2) enhance the foundations for scientific computing by
developing the basic mathematical and computing systems
software needed to take full advantage of the computing
capabilities of computers with peak speeds of 100 teraflops or
more, some of which may be unique to the scientific problem of
interest,
(3) enhance national collaboratory and networking
capabilities by developing software to integrate geographically
separated researchers into effective research teams and to
facilitate access to and movement and analysis of large (petabyte) data
sets, and
(4) maintain a robust scientific computing hardware
infrastructure to ensure that the computing resources needed to
address DOE missions are available; explore new computing
approaches and technologies that promise to advance scientific
computing.
Within the funds authorized to be appropriated pursuant to this Act,
the amounts specified under this section shall, subject to
appropriations, be available for the above research activities.
(c) High-Performance Computing Act Program.--Section 203(a) of the
High-Performance Computing Act of 1991 (15 U.S.C. 5523(a)) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (3), by striking ``and'';
(2) in paragraph (4), by striking the period and inserting
``; and''; and
(3) by adding after paragraph (4) the following: ``(5)
conduct an integrated program of research, development, an
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provision of facilities to develop and deploy to scientific and
technical users the high-performance computing and
collaboration tools needed to fulfill the statutory missions of
the Department of Energy in conducting basic and applied energy
research.''.
(d) Coordination With the DOE National Nuclear Security Agency
Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative and Other National Computing
Programs.--The Secretary shall ensure through the Director of the
Office of Science, that this program, to the extent feasible, is
integrated and consistent with the National Nuclear Security Agency's
Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative. The Secretary through the
Director of the Office of Science shall ensure that this program is
integrated and consistent with other national efforts related to
advanced scientific computing for science and engineering.
(e) Merit Review Required.--All grants, contracts, cooperative
agreements, or other financial assistance awards under this Act shall
be made only after independent merit and peer review.
SEC. 4. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
(a) Total Authorization.--The following sums are authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary of Energy, to remain available until
expended, for the purposes of carrying out this Act:
(1) $250,000,000 for fiscal year 2002.
(2) $285,000,000 for fiscal year 2003.
(3) $300,000,000 for fiscal year 2004.
(4) $310,000,000 for fiscal year 2005.
(b) High-End Computing R&D.--Of the funds under subsection (a), the
following sums are authorized to be appropriated to carry out high-end
computing R&D in section 3(b) (1) and (2):
(1) $39,500,000 for fiscal year 2002.
(2) $45,000,000 for fiscal year 2003.
(3) $45,000,000 for fiscal year 2004.
(4) $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2005.
(5) $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2006.
(c) Large-Scale Computing and Collaboratory Research.--Of the funds
under subsection (a), the following sums are authorized to be
appropriated to carry out large-scale computing and collaboratory
research in section 3(b)(3):
(1) $54,500,000 for fiscal year 2002.
(2) $57,000,000 for fiscal year 2003.
(3) $58,000,000 for fiscal year 2004.
(4) $60,000,000 for fiscal year 2005.
(5) $60,000,000 for fiscal year 2006.
(d) High-End Computing Infrastructure and Applications.--Of the
funds under subsection (a), the following sums are authorized to be
appropriated to carry out high end computing infrastructure and
associated applications in section 3(b)(4):
(1) $156,000,000 for fiscal year 2002.
(2) $183,000,000 for fiscal year 2003.
(3) $197,000,000 for fiscal year 2004.
(4) $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2005.
(5) $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2006.
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