Enterprise Information Technology Services Press Release The University of Georgia Athens, Georgia OCIO-> EITS-> Press Releases
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
WRITER: Bert DeSimone, 706/542-5110,
bert@uga.edu UGA eminent scholar Dr. Bi-Cheng Wang collaborates with state and national researchers to pioneer advanced, network-facilitated research ATHENS, Ga.— An initiative undertaken jointly by the Office of the Vice President for Research and the Office of the Chief Information Officer to provide high-speed network connectivity to UGA researchers made significant strides at a symposium held at Georgia State University on March 10, 2006. The high-speed network, known as the Southern Light Rail, is a local branch of the National LambdaRail, a nationwide high-speed network dedicated to research. Dr. Bi-Cheng Wang, a Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Structural Biology, successfully demonstrated an innovative use of a high-speed, point-to-point connection between Georgia State University and the Argonne National Laboratory in Chicago. Dr. Wang collaborated with a team from Georgia State University, the Southern Light Rail, and the Argonne National Laboratory. The team successfully controlled instrumentation and robotics at the Advanced Photon Source (APS) at the Argonne National Laboratory, which allows scientists to gather information about materials that make up inner Earth, outer space, and all points in between. Dr. Greg Derda, Information Technology Manager for UGA's Research Computing Center and a research scientist, explained the significance of the demonstration in terms of practical, human application. "Dr. Wang's work in X-Ray Crystallography is used to determine the structure and function of proteins and other molecules. Understanding the make up of these molecules can lead to great discoveries, including the cure for human ailments and diseases," said Derda. Dr. Wang is director of the Georgia X-Ray Crystallography Laboratory (GXRCC) at the University of Georgia and founder and director of the Southeast Regional Collaborative Access Team (SER-CAT), a consortium of 20 universities, two industrial companies, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, NASA, and the National Institutes of Health. The SER-CAT is managed by GXRCC and has built and operates a synchrotron X-ray facility at the APS, located outside of Chicago. "Crystallography is a tool that allows structural biologists to discern protein structures to the highest degree of detail possible in three dimensions," said Wang. "The interest of the SER-CAT consortium is to use the high brilliant X-rays at the APS to study the structure-functional aspects of molecular machines in living cells, relevant to health, environment, and energy." The crystallography laboratory at UGA is one of the most advanced academic X-ray crystallography laboratories in the world in terms of both availability of state-of-the-art equipment and new technology development. According to information released by Georgia State University, who hosted the 3rd Annual SER-CAT Symposium, attendees agreed that "the SER-CAT and Southern Light Rail had made a historic advance and set the bar in using high bandwidth optical networking for automated remote access to scientific instrumentation." A second demonstration is planned at the University of Georgia on April 7. Dr. Wang and the SER-CAT will host researchers from Japan in Athens, Georgia. A similar, high-speed connection will be established between Athens and the Argonne National Laboratory for the purpose of controlling instruments and robotics in real time over the network. For more information on Dr. Wang, his work, the Georgia X-Ray Crystallography Laboratory, and SER-CAT, please see http://www.uga.edu/biocryst and http://www.ser-cat.org.
About the Research Computing Center
About EITS | Comments and Suggestions | OCIO Home | EITS Home | EITS Press Releases | ## |