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BOINC based volunteer computing project Spinhenge@Home
Spinhenge@home
[1] was a
volunteer computing project on the
BOINC platform, which performs extensive numerical simulations concerning the physical characteristics of magnetic molecules. It is a project of the
Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences , Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, in cooperation with the
University of Osnabrück and
Ames Laboratory .
[2]
The project began
beta testing on September 1, 2006 and used the Metropolis
Monte Carlo algorithm to calculate and simulate
spin dynamics in
nanoscale
molecular magnets .
[3]
On September 28, 2011, a hiatus was announced while the project team reviewed results and upgraded hardware. As of July 10, 2022 the hiatus continues and it is likely that the project has been closed down permanently.
See also
References
^
"APS -75th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of APS - Event - QMC Goes BOINC: Using Public Resource Computing to Perform Quantum Monte Carlo Calculations" . Bulletin of the American Physical Society . 53 (13). American Physical Society.
Archived from the original on 2022-08-14. Retrieved 2022-09-05 .
^
"APS -76th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of APS - Event - How to use 100,000 PCs for studying magnetism" . Bulletin of the American Physical Society . 54 (16). American Physical Society.
^ Schröder, Christian; Prozorov, Ruslan; Kögerler, Paul; Vannette, Matthew D.; Fang, Xikui; Luban, Marshall; Matsuo, Akira; Kindo, Koichi; Müller, Achim; Todea, Ana Maria (2008-06-04). "Multiple nearest-neighbor exchange model for the frustrated magnetic molecules Mo72Fe30 and Mo72Cr30". Physical Review B . 77 (22): 224409.
arXiv :
0801.2065 .
doi :
10.1103/PhysRevB.77.224409 .
ISSN
1098-0121 .
S2CID
118422523 .
External links
Active Beta Alpha Technology, tools Terminated or inactive