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Season 4, Episode 4 -- Anubhav Jain: Hacking Materials

Science in Parallel

Release Date: 11/08/2023

Season 4, Episode 4 -- Anubhav Jain: Hacking Materials show art Season 4, Episode 4 -- Anubhav Jain: Hacking Materials

Science in Parallel

Artificial intelligence is reshaping research to discover new materials for a range of important applications. In this episode, meet of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, a researcher who has been at the forefront of this transition. He uses machine learning and other computational tools as a materials scientist to discover compounds that could store and convert energy and solve other societal problems. Anubhav’s current research path started in graduate school at MIT, where he was supported by a . We discuss how computational tools including AI have moved from a novel idea to a central...

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Season 4, Episode 3 -- Danilo Pérez: Embracing Versatility show art Season 4, Episode 3 -- Danilo Pérez: Embracing Versatility

Science in Parallel

Sometimes extraordinary circumstances like the pandemic offer researchers unexpected opportunities to serve others. Danilo Pérez, now a Ph.D. student in computational neuroscience at New York University, found himself in this situation in Puerto Rico in 2020. He contributed his mathematical modeling expertise as part of a team that built and maintained Puerto Rico’s public health data during that intense period. Later he contributed to AI-based modeling of coronavirus variants that won major honors in the computing community: the 2022 Gordon Bell Special Prize for HPC-Based COVID-19...

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Season 4, Episode 2 -- Casey Berger: Choose Your Own Multidimensional Career show art Season 4, Episode 2 -- Casey Berger: Choose Your Own Multidimensional Career

Science in Parallel

Traditional science career advice often urges people to specialize and become the best at one activity. But that perspective can undervalue interdisciplinary researchers and other polymaths who can see connections between and beyond science and engineering fields. This episode’s guest, Casey Berger, describes how she has navigated this second approach, embracing her many interests, such as science, computing, teaching and storytelling, to make her mark as a physicist and data scientist and as a fiction author. In the second episode of our podcast series on creativity in computing, Casey...

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Season 4, Episode 1 -- Creativity in Climate Modeling show art Season 4, Episode 1 -- Creativity in Climate Modeling

Science in Parallel

Season 4 of Science in Parallel centers around creativity and computing, starting with an interview about climate modeling. At this nexus of physics, earth science, mathematics and computing, researchers are also racing against the clock to accurately predict how global climate is shifting before the changes happen. Pulling all the scientific pieces together and communicating those results so that others can use them are significant creative challenges—ones that both Tapio Schneider and Emily de Jong of California Institute of Technology have embraced. In our conversation, Tapio and Emily...

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Season 3, Episode 5 -- Beyond Exascale: Exploring Emerging Hardware show art Season 3, Episode 5 -- Beyond Exascale: Exploring Emerging Hardware

Science in Parallel

The exascale era in computing has arrived, and that brings up the question of what’s next. We’ll discuss some emerging processor technologies-- molecular storage and computing, quantum computing and neuromorphic chips—with an expert from each of those fields. Learn more about these technologies’ strengths and challenges and how they might be incorporated into tomorrow’s systems.  You’ll meet: , professor of and CEO of the AI startup . , senior scientist and department head for computational sciences at and deputy director of the .  , is a neuromorphic computing...

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Season 3, Episode 4 -- Gabriel Casabona: It All Comes Down to Gravity show art Season 3, Episode 4 -- Gabriel Casabona: It All Comes Down to Gravity

Science in Parallel

Although he’s always loved space, Gabriel Casabona pursued other fields, including medicine and religion, before landing in astrophysics. We discussed how his passion for physics motivated him to deepen his knowledge of math and computing, how gravity’s mysteries define his work and other big challenges he hopes to work on during his career. You’ll meet: is a Ph.D. student in computational and theoretical astrophysics at Northwestern University. His work is supported by a Department of Energy Computational Science graduate fellowship. This conversation was recorded in person in November...

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Season 3, Episode 3 -- Tammy Ma: Fusion Ignition and Beyond show art Season 3, Episode 3 -- Tammy Ma: Fusion Ignition and Beyond

Science in Parallel

In early December 2022, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory announced that the (NIF) had achieved fusion ignition—a reaction of merging hydrogen isotopes that produced more energy than the lasers put in. High-performance computing is an important part of designing, analyzing and refining these experiments, and this episode examines the connection between computing and fusion energy. You’ll meet: , a plasma physicist at Livermore, talks about how supercomputing supported fusion ignition. Tammy also leads the lab’s . Tammy’s scientific expertise is doing experiments rather than...

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Season 3, Episode 2 –- Margaret Lawson: Finding Her Place show art Season 3, Episode 2 –- Margaret Lawson: Finding Her Place

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Even after enjoying her first computer science course, Margaret Lawson wasn’t convinced she’d have a place in the field. But today she works on cloud storage for Google after completing her Ph.D. at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where she was supported by a Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship (DOE CSGF). This conversation was recorded at the Supercomputing meeting (SC22) in Dallas in November 2022, where Margaret co-led a  on Ethics in High Performance Computing. We talked about that session, her pursuit of challenging computer science...

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Season 3, Episode 1 -- Joe Insley: Big Data to Beautiful Images show art Season 3, Episode 1 -- Joe Insley: Big Data to Beautiful Images

Science in Parallel

Making sense of computational science takes a multidisciplinary team, including science visualization experts who translate data into images that both parse information so that it’s comprehensible and render it into beautiful images and skillful animations. Joe Insley of Argonne Leadership Computing Facility and Northern Illinois University has been doing this work for more than 20 years, leveraging deep training in both digital art and computer science to build showstopping visualizations. We talked about his training, how he approaches this work and how in situ visualization—techniques...

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Season 2, Episode 6 -- Pushing Limits in Computing and Biology show art Season 2, Episode 6 -- Pushing Limits in Computing and Biology

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Science in Parallel’s season two concludes with a conversation about answering important questions in biology and medicine with leadership class supercomputers, including urgent issues that came up during the COVID-19 pandemic. You’ll hear from Anda Trifan of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and Amanda Randles of Duke University. Starting as a chemist, Anda is completing a Ph.D. in biophysics and quantitative biology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign where she has studied molecular strategies that make certain cells turn cancerous. In early 2020, she joined an...

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More Episodes

Artificial intelligence is reshaping research to discover new materials for a range of important applications. In this episode, meet Anubhav Jain of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, a researcher who has been at the forefront of this transition. He uses machine learning and other computational tools as a materials scientist to discover compounds that could store and convert energy and solve other societal problems.

Anubhav’s current research path started in graduate school at MIT, where he was supported by a Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship. We discuss how computational tools including AI have moved from a novel idea to a central piece of materials discovery, how he applies machine learning tools to other tasks such as mining data from scientific papers, and the rewards that came from writing his blog called Hacking Materials.

This episode concludes our season 4 series on creativity in computing.