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- For the Record, Nov. 6, 2009
- Additional Maroon 5 tickets to go on sale for UD students Nov. 9
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- Delaware Army ROTC team competes in Ranger Challenge
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- UD profs discuss Nobels in chemistry, literature, economics
- Blue Hen alums return to UD for Homecoming
- UD alum Christopher Christie elected governor of New Jersey
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- Gamma Sigma Sigma supports Crohn's and Colitis Foundation
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- University hosts conference on ethics of climate change
- Solar panels latest in green technology at UD dairy farm
- UD Library Special Collections on the road
- UD pre-service students assist with Teachers of Science newsletter
- UD honors 2009 Presidential Citation recipients
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- Ellen Wise joins College of Education and Public Policy as director of development
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- Nov.18: Delaware seeks CAA Blood Challenge title
- Nov. 9-10: Conference to focus on creating new economies for Delaware, the nation
- Nov. 9: Blue Hen basketball rally planned
- Nov. 10: Preconception health fair set in Trabant
- Nov. 11: Science Cafe returns to Newark
- Nov. 11: Dan Rich to speak on the role of universities in a global economy
- Nov. 11: Annual Step-n-Stroll show set at The Bob
- Nov. 11: Pompeii revisited during past three centuries
- Nov. 12: 'Shakespeare First' to feature lecture by James Shapiro
- Nov. 13: Project MUSIC Day to host elementary students
- Nov. 13: Student-organized ONE event to focus on poverty, hunger, disease
- Nov. 13: DuPont CEO Ellen Kullman to give talk at UD
- Nov. 14: Blue Hens tailgate tent set for Navy game
- Nov. 16: New opening act for Maroon 5 concert announced
- Nov. 17: UD students plan rally to open Relay for Life season
- Nov. 18: College of Education and Public Policy to host first expo
- Nov. 18: National Superintendent of the Year to visit Delaware
- Nov. 19: UD plans Geospatial Research Day
- Nov. 19: Darwin Lecture considers the origins of art
- Nov. 20: Tarburton to speak at Friends of Agriculture Breakfast
- Sept. 30-Nov. 18: School of Nursing offers fall research lecture series
- Oct. 23-Nov. 13: UD to host international art show in Second Life
- Oct. 14-Nov. 18: Art, history experts to offer gallery talks
- Oct. 11-Nov. 29: International Film Series offered Sundays at Trabant
- Sept. 9-Dec. 2: 'Assessing Obama' series to feature faculty, national speakers
- Sept. 9-Dec. 2: 'Research on Women' fall lecture series announced
- Sept. 18-Dec. 18: Library's 'Lion Awakes' exhibition looks at reggae, Marley
- Sept. 26-May 1: Take in an opera at the Met with UD matinee tickets
- More What's Happening >>
- UD calendar >>
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- More Campus FYI >>
2:18 p.m., June 15, 2009----Through a grant from the Department of Defense University Research Instrumentation Program, a University of Delaware research group led by Krzysztof Szalewicz, professor of physics and astronomy, has acquired a new Dell teraflop supercomputer cluster that they have named “kolos.” Prof. Szalewicz answers some questions for UDaily about this powerful new research tool.
Q. How powerful is this supercomputer? What can it do?
A. It is very powerful indeed. “Tera” means a trillion and “flop” stands for floating point operations, a measure of computer speed, describing how many multiplications a computer can perform within one second. Kolos is capable of performing 2.4 trillion calculations per second. Until recently, this kind of computer power was available only in supercomputer centers maintained by the Department of Defense or the Department of Energy. With kolos, we can now do locally almost all calculations that previously were possible only at those centers.
Q. What research are you using kolos for?
A. We are using kolos mainly to compute intermolecular forces. If such forces are known, one can predict the properties of liquids, solids, and biological materials. Our recent work provides several examples of how important such predictions are. For example, our computed properties of helium are now being used by researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to create new standards of temperature and pressure. Another example is our successful predictions of the crystal structure of organic molecules -- a task that previously had been considered impossible. For example, in the pharmaceutical industry, it is very important to know if a drug can crystallize in energetically close but different structures, called polymorphs. There have been cases in which patients have died after using different polymorphs of some drugs. Another example is crystals of energetic materials since different polymorphs can have very different densities and therefore different energy output per unit mass.
Q. Does kolos require any special care?
A. It has to be housed in a room with high-capacity air conditioning. We were very lucky to be allowed to place the cluster in the UD computing center at South Chapel.
Q. Who is kolos named for?
A. The supercomputer cluster was named “kolos” in memory of Wlodzimierz Kolos (1928-1996), a distinguished theoretical molecular physicist and professor of chemistry at the University of Warsaw, Poland. Kolos was one of the pioneers who used computers to accurately predict the properties of small molecules, in particular the hydrogen molecule. His results for the dissociation energy of this molecule, which is the energy required to infinitely separate atoms from the equilibrium configuration of a molecule -- demonstrated for the first time that a computational approach can be more accurate than experiments, as acknowledged by Gerhard Herzberg in his Nobel lecture in 1971.
Article by Tracey Bryant
Photo by Ambre Alexander


