Dr. Norman Appointed Chief Scientific Officer of SDSC

World-Renowned Astrophysicist to Promote Cyberinfrastructure Partnerships Within and Beyond UC San Diego: The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) today announced the appointment of Michael L. Norman, distinguished professor of physics at the University of California, San Diego, to the new position of Chief Scientific Officer for SDSC. “We are delighted to welcome Mike officially,” said Fran Berman, Director of SDSC, an organized research unit of UC San Diego. “Mike has been working informally with SDSC this year and has demonstrated tremendous value and leadership, both on campus and at SDSC. With Mike’s stellar credentials as a distinguished professor at UCSD and as an internationally recognized computational scientist, his leadership at SDSC is already proving to be a tremendous asset to the organization.” Norman joins SDSC as the supercomputer center nears completion of an 80,000-square foot, award-winning ‘green’ building expansion. The addition is scheduled to open in fall 2008, doubling the overall size of the supercomputer center. Nearly 5,000 square feet of machine room space will be added, bringing SDSC’s total machine room area to approximately 18,000 square feet. “This is an exciting time for SDSC, and I am honored to have the opportunity to help guide the center in this next chapter of collaboration as we all work to promote full integration between campus-wide efforts and SDSC on cyberinfrastructure-oriented research, development and education.” said Norman. “I also look forward to forging new partnerships across the entire UC system, as well as with organizations in San Diego, throughout California, and throughout the world, as we provide the highest levels of expertise in data-intensive computing for the entire spectrum of investigative science.” Norman, named a Senior Fellow of SDSC in 2000, is an internationally recognized astrophysicist, using advanced computational methods to explore the universe and its beginnings. He directs the Laboratory for Computational Astrophysics, a collaboration between UCSD and SDSC resulting in the Computational Astrophysics Data Center (CADAC), a free service for the astrophysics community that hosts a public data collection from large astrophysical simulations and provides data-analysis resources to researchers worldwide. Michael L. Norman
Norman is also one of the world’s leading users of supercomputing time, both at SDSC and throughout the TeraGrid, the world’s largest open scientific discovery infrastructure that links 11 supercomputer sites around the U.S. He is currently completing a record-setting simulation that will be the largest cosmological calculation to date, as his research examines the dynamics of the Reionization Era - when there was enough radiated energy to ionize, or remove electrons from natural gases, making the universe translucent after its formation. Norman’s work has earned him numerous honors, including receiving Germany’s prestigious Alexander von Humboldt Research Prize, the IEEE Sidney Fernbach Award, and several HPCC Challenge Awards. He also is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Physical Society. Norman holds an M.S. and Ph.D. in Engineering and Applied Science from UC Davis, and completed his post doctoral work at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics , in Garching, Germany, in 1984. From 1986 to 2000, Norman held numerous positions at the University of Illinois in Urbana, as an NCSA associate director and senior research scientist under Larry Smarr, currently UCSD’s director of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), and as a professor of astronomy. Prior to that, he was a staff member at Los Alamos National Laboratory from 1984 to 1986.