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Computing in Science and Engineering, Volume 4
Volume 4, Number 1, January / February 2002
- David I. Lewin:
Computer-aided paleontology: a new look for dinosaurs. 5-9 - Nancy Forbes, Paul Messina:
Computer science today in the European Union. 10-14 - Douglas Tougaw, Jon Sanders:
SunRay: a cost-effective desktop computer solution. 15-17 - Srikanta Kumar, Shankar Sastry:
Guest editors' introduction: Biocomputation. 18-19 - Rajeev Alur, Calin Belta, Vijay Kumar, Max Mintz, George J. Pappas, Harvey Rubin, Jonathan Schug:
Modeling and analyzing biomolecular networks. 20-31 - John H. Reif:
DNA lattices: A method for molecular-scale patterning and computation. 32-41 - Bud Mishra:
Comparing gnomes. 42-49 - Ying Xu, Dong Xu, Dongsup Kim, Victor Olman, Jane Razumovskaya, Tao Jiang:
Automated assignment of backbone NMR peaks using constrained bipartite matching. 50-62 - Juhani Hämäläinen, Kari Hirvi, Hannu Rajaniemi:
Using mathematical models to cope with complex computer simulations. 64-72 - George K. Thiruvathukal:
Java at middle age: enabling Java for computational science. 74-84 - Yonggao Yang, Xusheng Wang, Jim X. Chen:
Rendering avatars in virtual reality: integrating a 3D model with 2D images. 86-91 - Denis Donnelly:
The fireworks effect: exploring trajectory sets in time. 92-97
Volume 4, Number 2, March / April 2002
- Francis Sullivan:
Trust but verify. 3-4 - Greg Goth:
Fans of Hewlett-Packard calculators say "it all adds up". 5-8 - Charles J. Holland, John Grosh:
High-performance computing: addressing defense needs of today and tomorrow. 11-14 - Stephen J. Schraml, Kent D. Kimsey, Jerry A. Clarke:
High-performance computing applications for survivability-lethality technologies. 16-21 - Jay P. Boris:
The threat of chemical and biological terrorism: preparing a response. 22-32 - Emily A. Jarvis, Emily A. Carter:
The role of reactive elements in thermal barrier coatings. 33-41 - Robert E. Peterkin, John W. Luginsland:
A virtual prototyping environment for directed-energy concepts. 42-49 - Alan J. Wallcraft, Harley E. Hurlburt, E. Joseph Metzger, Robert C. Rhodes, Jay F. Shriver, Ole Martin Smedstad:
Real-time ocean modeling systems. 50-57 - Mark A. Manzardo, Kenneth G. LeSueur:
An infrared-scene projector digital model. 58-65 - Frans M. Vos, Hans J. W. Spoelder, Desmond Germans, Rutger F. H. Hofman, Henri E. Bal:
Real-time, adaptive measurement of corneal shapes. 66-76 - Rubin H. Landau, David Vediner, Pornrat Wattanakasiwich, Kevin R. Kyle:
Future scientific digital documents with MathML, XML, and SVG. 77-85 - Isabel Beichl, Francis Sullivan:
It's bound to be right [image state change detection]. 86-89 - Karen D. Devine, Erik G. Boman, Robert T. Heaphy, Bruce Hendrickson, Courtenay T. Vaughan:
Zoltan data management services for parallel dynamic applications. 90-96
Volume 4, Number 3, May / June 2002
- David I. Lewin:
DNA computing. 5-8 - Douglas Tougaw:
Finding your way with the garmin GPS V. 10-13 - Douglass E. Post, Francis Sullivan:
Guest Eidtors' Introduction Limits on computations. 14-15 - Michael P. Frank:
The physical limits of computing. 16-26 - Robert B. Laughlin:
The physical basis of computability. 27-30 - Stephan Mertens:
Computational complexity for physicists. 31-47 - Charles Blilie:
Patterns in scientific software: an introduction. 48-53 - Sune R. Bahn, Karsten W. Jacobsen:
An object-oriented scripting interface to a legacy electronic structure code. 56-66 - Christoph Best, Hans-Christian Hege:
Visualizing and identifying conformational ensembles in molecular dynamics trajectories. 68-75 - Julian V. Noble:
The full Monte. 76-81 - Dave Stainforth, Jamie Kettleborough, Myles Allen, Mat Collins, Andy Heaps, James Murphy:
Distributed computing for public-interest climate modeling research. 82-89 - Xusheng Wang, Jim X. Chen, Daniel B. Carr, Sue Bell, Linda Pickle:
Geographic statistics visualization: web-based linked micromap plots. 90-94 - Geoffrey C. Fox:
XML and the importance of being an object. 96-98 - Nicholas Giordano:
On hearing the'"shape"' of a vibrating string. 100-105
Volume 4, Number 4, July / August 2002
- Greg Goth:
The neural network is advancing. 6-10 - Anne Jacobson:
Nanotechnology meets marine biology. 10-11 - Anne Jacobson:
Bioinformatics booming. 11 - Auroop R. Ganguly:
A hybrid approach to improving rainfall forecasts. 14-21 - David S. Thompson, Raghu Machiraju, Ming Jiang, Jaya Sreevalsan-Nair, Gheorghe Craciun, Satya Sridhar Dusi Venkata:
Physics-based feature mining for large data exploration. 22-30 - Naren Ramakrishnan, Chris Bailey-Kellogg:
Sampling strategies for mining in data-scarce domains. 31-43 - Robert L. Grossman, Marco Mazzucco:
DataSpace: a data Web for the exploratory analysis and mining of data. 44-51 - Chandrika Kamath, Erick Cantú-Paz, Imola K. Fodor, Nu Ai Tang:
Classifying bent-double galaxies. 52-60 - Madhu Chetty, Rajkumar Buyya:
Weaving computational grids: how analogous are they with electrical grids? 61-71 - Bert W. Rust:
Fitting nature's basic functions. Part III: exponentials, sinusoids, and nonlinear least squares. 72-77 - Emil Ong:
MPI Ruby: scripting in a parallel environment. 78-82 - Geoffrey C. Fox:
E-science meets computational science and information technology. 84-85 - Dale R. Shires, William Green, Shawn Walsh:
Designing, controlling, and visualizing composite material manufacturing. 86-91 - George Cybenko:
Understanding Quantum Computing [Book Review]. 92 - Matt Marone:
The Mercer online interactive chaotic pendulum. 94-97
Volume 4, Number 5, September / October 2002
- Greg Goth:
Infrastructure simulation effort has high hopes, faces high hurdles. 4-7 - David I. Lewin:
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy. 8-9 - Nancy Forbes:
Treading new ground [tire industry]. 12-13 - William F. Spotz, Paul N. Swarztrauber:
Climate modeling. 24-25 - Stephen J. Thomas, Richard D. Loft, John M. Dennis:
Parallel implementation issues: global versus local methods. 26-31 - David A. Randall, Todd D. Ringler, Ross Heikes, Phil Jones, John Baumgardner:
Climate modeling with spherical geodesic grids. 32-41 - Mohamed Iskandarani, Dale B. Haidvogel, Julia Levin, Enrique Curchitser, Christopher A. Edwards:
Multi-scale geophysical modeling using the spectral element method. 42-48 - Kao-San Yeh, Shian-Jiann Lin, Richard B. Rood:
Applying local discretization methods in the NASA finite-volume general circulation model. 49-54 - Johann Feichter, Martin G. Schultz, Thomas Diehl:
Modeling chemical constituents of the atmosphere. 56-63 - Vicky Pope, Terry Davies:
Testing and evaluating atmospheric climate models. 64-69 - Geoffrey C. Fox:
Message passing: from parallel computing to the grid. 70-73 - Richard R. Silbar:
Web delivery of interactive laboratories: comparing three authoring tools. 74-78 - Paul F. Dubois:
Designing scientific components. 84-90 - Julian V. Noble:
The right angle: precise numerical orthogonality in eigenstates. 91-97
Volume 4, Number 6, November / December 2002
- Francis Sullivan:
EWD: making it simple is not easy. 2-3 - David I. Lewin:
Vintage computing [Use of computers in winemaking]. 4-10 - Fionn Murtagh, Jean-Luc Starck, Mireille Louys:
Distributed visual information management in astronomy. 14-23 - Reiko Suzuki, Hiroshi Sato, Mineo Kimura:
Antiproton-hydrogen atom collision at intermediate energy. 24-33 - Dongshan Xing, Junyi Shen:
A new Markov model for Web access prediction. 34-39 - D. E. Stevenson:
The Michelson-Morley experiment: a case study on validation. 40-51 - Fahri Basegmez:
Extending a scientific application with scripting capabilities. 52-59 - Hai Zhuge:
Clustering soft-devices in the semantic grid. 60-62 - Charles H. Patterson:
Two approaches to teaching computation physics. 64-68 - Isabel Beichl:
Dealing with degeneracy in triangulation. 70-74 - Marco Lanzagorta:
Interactive visualization of a high-resolution reconstruction of the Moon. 78-82
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