A recent program alum interweaves large and small scales in wind-energy and ocean models.
Exploring electrons
At UC Berkeley, a fellow applies machine learning to sharpen microscopy.
Subduing software surprises
A Cornell University fellowship recipient works on methods for ensuring software functions as expected.
‘Crazy ideas’
A UCSD engineering professor and former DOE CSGF recipient combines curiosity and diverse research experiences to tackle nanoscale questions and energy applications.
Star treatment
A UT Austin-based fellow blends physics and advanced computing to reveal cosmic rays’ role in stellar events.
New home for science and tech talk
With the fifth season’s first episode, a DOE CSGF-sponsored podcast launches a website.
Bolt basics
A Rice University fellow simulates the ins and outs of the familiar fasteners in pursuit of lean machines.
Computation across chemistry
A fellow uses his deep experience in math and computation to study electric fields in proteins, reactions in batteries and other chemistry problems.
‘Putting it all together’
A Vanderbilt University fellowship recipient applies math, physics and computation to sort out semiconductor defects.
Genomic field work
A UC Davis fellow combines computing, the corn genome and growing data to help farmers forecast biofortified crop production.
Tracking space debris
A Computational Science Graduate Fellowship recipient monitors threats to satellites in Earth’s ionosphere by modeling plasma waves.
Decisive achievement
A computational sciences fellow models COVID-19 virus variants and examines how people weigh complex decisions.
Learning climate
A Colorado State fellow employs machine learning for climate modeling, putting provenance behind predictions.
Statistically significant
A LANL statistician helps cosmologists and epidemiologists grasp their data and answer vital questions.
Planet-friendly plastics
A Los Alamos team applies machine learning to find environmentally benign plastics.
A split nanosecond
Sandia supercomputer simulations of atomic behavior under extreme conditions advances materials modeling.
A colorful career
Argonne’s Joe Insley combines art and computer science to build intricate images and animations from supercomputer simulations.
Mapping the metastable
An Argonne National Laboratory group uses supercomputers to model known and mysterious atomic arrangements, revealing useful properties.
The human factor
A PNNL team works to improve AI and machine learning tools so that grid operators can feel confident using them.
Simulation looped in
CogSim, a machine-learning approach modeled on the brain, coordinates simulations, experiments and data-analysis to yield results in fields from fusion energy to COVID-19.
Justice adjustments
An Oak Ridge team applies supercomputing to environmental justice in a changing climate.
Decoding disease
A CSGF fellow doggedly applies computational models to COVID-19 and cancer.
River of data
Oak Ridge-developed open-source software is helping model watersheds and related climate issues the world over
Boxing in software
At Los Alamos, novel container software is accelerating innovative science while ensuring supercomputer reliability and uptime.