Physics Researchers Awarded $2.3 Million to Develop NSF Einstein Toolkit for Astrophysics

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NSF awards $2.3 million to effort led by Pablo Laguna and Deirdre Shoemaker for the development of the Einstein Toolkit Ecosystem: Enabling Fundamental Research in the Era of Multi-Messenger Astrophysics

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Renay San Miguel
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College of Sciences
404-894-5209

 

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Summaries

Summary Sentence:

NSF awards $2.3 million to effort led by Pablo Laguna and Deirdre Shoemaker for the development of the Einstein Toolkit Ecosystem: Enabling Fundamental Research in the Era of Multi-Messenger Astrophysics

Full Summary:

Two Georgia Tech physicists, Pablo Laguna and Deirdre Shoemaker, are part of a new National Science Foundation award to continue development of the Einstein Toolkit, a collection of scientist-shared computational resources for advancing studies of relativistic astrophysics and gravitational wave physics.

Media
  • Figure 1 Simulation of the merger of two neutron stars detected by LIGO using the Einstein Toolkit. Left are the gravitational waves emitted and right the disrupted material. Credit: Karan Jani, Georgia Tech Figure 1 Simulation of the merger of two neutron stars detected by LIGO using the Einstein Toolkit. Left are the gravitational waves emitted and right the disrupted material. Credit: Karan Jani, Georgia Tech
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  • Pablo Laguna, Professor and Chair of the School of Physics Pablo Laguna, Professor and Chair of the School of Physics
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  • Deirdre Shoemaker, Director of the Center for Relativistic Astrophysics and professor in the School of Physics. Deirdre Shoemaker, Director of the Center for Relativistic Astrophysics and professor in the School of Physics.
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Two School of Physics professors are part of a multi-institution effort to provide scientists with the best computational resources for a new era of relativistic astrophysics – an era that now includes measurements of gravitational waves caused by black hole collisions.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded $2.3 million through its Cyberinfrastructure for Sustained Scientific Innovations (CSSI) program to an existing collaborative effort between Georgia Tech, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Rochester Institute of Technology, Louisiana State University, and West Virginia University to further develop the Einstein Toolkit. The new funding will put UIUC as the lead investigating institution; Georgia Tech had been the lead during a previous funding round.

The project at Georgia Tech is led by co-principal investigators and School of Physics professors Pablo Laguna, who is also the school's chair, and Deirdre Shoemaker. Both are also with Georgia Tech's Center for Relativistic Astrophysics.

The Einstein Toolkit is a community-driven open source ecosystem that provides computational tools to solve Einstein’s equations of general relativity, and to advance research in relativistic astrophysics and gravitational wave physics.

The research team aims to address current and future challenges in modeling sources of gravitational waves such as the collisions of black holes and neutron stars. The main goal of the effort supported by this award will be to improve the scalability of the software and expand the science addressed with the toolkit. The project stems from a previous NSF grant for collaborative research in community planning for scalable cyberinfrastructure to support multi-messenger astrophysics (gravitational waves, neutrinos, gamma and X-rays, along with traditional observations from telescopes and space probes). That grant was awarded to Laguna in 2018.

The Einstein Toolkit is utilized by many groups across six continents, and is developed and supported in a distributed, collaborative manner. Its focus on community-based development has resulted in a large user base — to date, 282 registered users from 194 different groups and 40 countries. In addition, the toolkit supports simulations providing information on gravitational waveforms for the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO).

“OAC is pleased to support community-driven software platforms that advance research in relativistic astrophysics that are relevant to Multi-Messenger Astrophysics," says Dr. Manish Parashar, office director for the Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (OAC) at NSF.

Read more about the collaborative frameworks research project, The Einstein Toolkit Ecosystem: Enabling Fundamental Research in the Era of Multi-Messenger Astrophysics.

 

 

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College of Sciences, School of Physics

Categories
Physics and Physical Sciences
Related Core Research Areas
Data Engineering and Science, People and Technology
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Keywords
College of Sciences, School of Physics, Center for Relativistic Astrophysics, Einstein Toolkit, Pablo Laguna, Deirdre Shoemaker, astrophysics, Gravitational waves
Status
  • Created By: Renay San Miguel
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Apr 22, 2020 - 4:10pm
  • Last Updated: Apr 23, 2020 - 2:45pm