SCEC Scientific Software

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SCEC Community Modeling Environment CME Project researchers have developed a group of inter-related ground motion and seismic hazard modeling software tools that the National Science Foundation SI2 Project describes as a software ecosystem. Funding for this software development work comes from the National Science Foundation (NSF), W. M. Keck Foundation, Pacific Gas and Electric, and other funding sources. The links below provide access to the currently maintained SCEC open-source scientific software distributions.

CME Scientific Software Distributions

Software Name Scientific Application Software Project Homepage Current Science (Software) Person
SCEC-VDO 3D visualization software used to display fault models and earthquake catalogs http://scec.usc.edu/internships/useit/scec-vdo T. Jordan (K. Milner)
OpenSHA USGS and SCEC-developed seismic hazard analysis software including UCERF2 and UCERF3 models http://www.opensha.org/ E. Field (K. Milner)
Broadband Platform Ground motion simulation software Broadband Platform C. Goulet (F. Silva)
Community Velocity Model - Harvard (CVM-H) 3D seismic velocity model for southern California an element of the SCEC Unified Structural Representation CVM-H J. Shaw (D. Gill)
Community Velocity Model - SCEC (CVM-S) 3D seismic velocity model for southern California CVM-S T. Jordan (P. Maechling)
Unified Community Velocity Model (UCVM) Software framework used to query seismic velocity models including HPC tools UCVM T. Jordan (D. Gill)
AWP-ODC Parallel finite difference earthquake wave propagation code AWP-ODC K. Olsen (Y. Cui)
Hercules Parallel finite element earthquake wave propagation code https://github.com/CMU-Quake/hercules J. Bielak (R. Taborda)
CSEP Earthquake forecast testing framework used in US and internationally CSEP M. Werner (M. Liukis)

CME Scientific Software Platforms

To perform large-scale research calculations, SCEC's software development staff converts scientific software used by individual researcher into scientific software used for community research. CME Project software developers integrate complex scientific codes together into larger computational systems called Computational Platforms. Each SCEC computational platform is designed to reliably perform some useful or valuable research calculation. In some cases, the large-scale computational tools customized to run efficiently on current supercomputers. Distribution of these codes require coordination and technical support from SCEC.

See Also