Journal: Computing in Science and Engineering

Volume 3, Issue 4

4 -- 7David I. Lewin. Searching for the elusive qubit
8 -- 11Donald L. Shirer. LabView 6i adds internet features to data acquisition environment
12 -- 17Samuel T. Jones, Scott E. Parker, Charlson C. Kim. Low-cost high-performance scientific visualization
18 -- 29Renate Dohmen, Jakob Pichlmeier, Max Petersen, Frank Wagner, Matthias Scheffler. Parallel FP-LAPW for distributed-memory machines
30 -- 39Max Schaible. Searching scientific databases for guides to experiment and theory
40 -- 41James R. Chelikowsky, Mark A. Ratner. Nanoscience, nanotechnology, and modeling
42 -- 55Deepak Srivastava, Madhu Menon, Kyeongjae Cho. Computational nanotechnology with carbon nanotubes and fullerenes
56 -- 66Aiichiro Nakano, Martina E. Bachlechner, Rajiv K. Kalia, Elefterios Lidorikis, Priya Vashishta, George Z. Voyiadjis, Timothy Campbell, Shuji Ogata, Fuyuki Shimojo. Multiscale simulation of nanosystems
67 -- 73K. Lance Kelly, Anne A. Lazarides, George C. Schatz. Computational electromagnetics of metal nanoparticles and their aggregates
74 -- 77Geoffrey Fox, Dennis Gannon. Computational grids
78 -- 85Jens Hannemann, Regina Hannemann, Michael Zellerhoff, Ludger Klinkenbusch. Scientific programming in field theory. 2
86 -- 91Timothy C. Black, William J. Thompson. Bayesian data analysis
92 -- 95Wolfgang Windl, Matthew Laudon, Neil N. Carlson, Murray S. Daw. Predictive process simulation and stress-mediated diffusion in silicon
96 -- 97Norris Parker Smith. How bubbles pop... and could pop once more