ALCF Hands-on Workshop Connects Researchers with HPC Experts
For three days this May, more than 40 researchers visited the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF), a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility, to improve the performance of their computational science codes by working alongside the experts who know the facility’s supercomputers best.
Read more about ALCF Hands-on Workshop Connects Researchers with HPC ExpertsMeet Claire Lee: Particle Physicist and Non-Traditional Science Communicator
Lee, who is from South Africa, is a postdoctoral research associate at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory. She works on the ATLAS experiment, one of seven particle detector experiments analyzing data from collisions of particles such as protons and lead ions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Europe.
Read more about Meet Claire Lee: Particle Physicist and Non-Traditional Science CommunicatorX-Ray Experiment Confirms Theoretical Model for Making New Materials
Experiments at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have confirmed the predictive power of a new computational approach to materials synthesis. Researchers say that this approach, developed at the DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, could streamline the creation of novel materials for solar cells, batteries and other sustainable technologies.
Read more about X-Ray Experiment Confirms Theoretical Model for Making New MaterialsFermilab Computing Experts Bolster NOvA Evidence, 1 Million Cores Consumed
The NOvA neutrino experiment, in collaboration with the Department of Energy’s Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC-4) program and the HEPCloud program at DOE’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, was able to perform the largest-scale analysis ever to support the recent evidence of antineutrino oscillation, a phenomenon that may hold clues to how our universe evolved.
Read more about Fermilab Computing Experts Bolster NOvA Evidence, 1 Million Cores Consumed10 Questions for Steven Cowley, New Director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Steven Cowley, a theoretical physicist and international authority on fusion energy, became the seventh Director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) on July 1 and will be Princeton professor of astrophysical sciences on September 1.
Read more about 10 Questions for Steven Cowley, New Director of the Princeton Plasma Physics LaboratoryHigh-School Students Studying Carbon-Based Nanomaterials for Cancer Drug Delivery Visit Brookhaven Lab's Nanocenter
The 11th graders from Islip High School brought the graphene oxide microspheres they made at Stony Brook University to the Center for Functional Nanomaterials for imaging.
Read more about High-School Students Studying Carbon-Based Nanomaterials for Cancer Drug Delivery Visit Brookhaven Lab's NanocenterNew Simulations Break Down Potential Impact of a Major Quake by Building Location and Size
A team from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, both U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) national labs, is leveraging powerful supercomputers to portray the impact of high-frequency ground motion on thousands of representative different-sized buildings spread out across the California region.
Read more about New Simulations Break Down Potential Impact of a Major Quake by Building Location and SizeALCF Selects Data and Learning Projects for Aurora Early Science Program
The Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF), a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility, has selected 10 data science and machine learning projects for its Aurora Early Science Program (ESP). Set to be the nation’s first exascale system upon its expected 2021 arrival, Aurora will be capable of performing a quintillion calculations per second.
Read more about ALCF Selects Data and Learning Projects for Aurora Early Science ProgramSeparate But Together: Ultrathin Membrane Both Isolates and Couples Living and Non-Living Catalysts
Bioelectrochemical systems combine the best of both worlds – microbial cells with inorganic materials – to make fuels and other energy-rich chemicals with unrivaled efficiency. Yet technical difficulties have kept them impractical anywhere but in a lab. Now researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have developed a novel nanoscale membrane that could address these issues and pave the way for commercial scale-up.
Read more about Separate But Together: Ultrathin Membrane Both Isolates and Couples Living and Non-Living CatalystsReproducibility Matters
An international team led by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Cornell University, and the Joint Genome Institute report on the results of a large-scale field study, scaling up from 500 to 5,000 samples, that partially replicates earlier trials to identify soil microbes that colonize plants and which can be associated with particular traits.
Read more about Reproducibility MattersStudent Interns Dive into Plasma in One-week Course
PPPL launched about 60 student interns into a summer of research by hosting an intensive one-week course in plasma physics the week of June 11. The students, including 32 students in the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internships (SULI) program, attended lectures by experts at PPPL and from institutions around the country.
Read more about Student Interns Dive into Plasma in One-week CourseUEC Profile: Combining Models With Observations, Andrew Gettelman Puzzles Out Cloud-Aerosol Interactions
Andrew Gettelman, a scientist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research, serves on several satellite science teams and evaluates models through data analysis linked to both satellite and field programs.
Read more about UEC Profile: Combining Models With Observations, Andrew Gettelman Puzzles Out Cloud-Aerosol Interactions