| The TeraGrid Geographic Information Science Gateway was used for the research that yielded this graphic. The image, created by Shaowen Wang of the University of Illinois, represents spatial distributions of water quality impacted by human activities. Image courtesy of the TeraGrid Geographic Information Science Gateway. |
The TeraGrid provides three kinds of Gateways, categorized according to the way the user connects and the type of resources linked: Web portals, desktop applications that run on the user’s local machine but connect to remote TeraGrid services, and grid-bridging gateways that extend the reach of a community grid to TeraGrid resources. Although each Gateway targets a particular research audience, most are available for use by researchers from any community. Some are also appropriate for use by educators. “Our job,” says Wilkins-Diehr “is to provide access to tremendously capable TeraGrid resources through interfaces that scientists are familiar with. If we're successful, many will not realize they are using the TeraGrid, only that they are able to answer scientific questions they couldn’t answer before.”
—Michael Schneider, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center |