Krell Institute

Science in Parallel

Science EN ↓ 45 Folgen

Science in Parallel focuses on people in computational science and their interdisciplinary research to solve energy challenges, discover new materials, model medicines and more — using high-performance computing (HPC) and artificial intelligence. Host Sarah Webb interviews researchers about their career paths and motivations. Our conversations cover topics such as integrating emerging hardware, the effects of remote work, the role of creativity in computing and foundation models in science. Our show is for curious, science-oriented listeners who like technology. You don't need a deep backgroun...

Autor

Krell Institute

Kategorie

Science

Podcast-Website

scienceinparallel.org

Neueste Folge

17. Jun 2026

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Season 4, Episode 2 -- Casey Berger: Choose Your Own Multidimensional Career 11.10.2023

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...

Season 4, Episode 1 -- Creativity in Climate Modeling 27.09.2023

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...

Season 3, Episode 5 -- Beyond Exascale: Exploring Emerging Hardware 21.06.2023

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: Luis...

Season 3, Episode 4 -- Gabriel Casabona: It All Comes Down to Gravity 07.06.2023

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: Gabriel Casabona is a Ph. D. student in com...

Season 3, Episode 3 -- Tammy Ma: Fusion Ignition and Beyond 24.05.2023

In early December 2022, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory announced that the National Ignition Facility (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...

Season 3, Episode 2 –- Margaret Lawson: Finding Her Place 10.05.2023

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 Supercomputi...

Season 3, Episode 1 -- Joe Insley: Big Data to Beautiful Images 26.04.2023

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, leveragi...

Season 2, Episode 6 -- Pushing Limits in Computing and Biology 26.10.2022

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 bi...

Season 2, Episode 5 -- Improving Computing Performance and Workforce Diversity 05.10.2022

Valerie Taylor doesn't shy away from challenging problems with multiple layers. At Argonne National Laboratory, she manages teams that develop algorithms, data management strategies, software and hardware to support scientific simulations, including those on the Department of Energy's leadership-class supercomputers. Her research focuses on performance analysis—the factors involved in making compu...

Season 2, Episode 4 -- You're Moving to Finland? 06.07.2022

After COVID-19 lockdowns and 2020 wildfires near his Oregon home, computational scientist Jeff Hammond decided to make big moves. In 2021, his family of five emigrated from Portland to Finland, and Jeff changed positions, leaving Intel and taking a new job with NVIDIA. Even before 2020, he had worked primarily remotely and discusses the lessons he hopes technology companies learn from pandemic wor...

Season 2, Episode 3 -- Two PhDs + Pandemic + Baby 22.06.2022

Pandemic work was especially challenging for computational scientist parents, who often juggled new work arrangements while balancing their children's care. In this episode you'll hear from a couple who were Ph. D. students and had a 10-month-old baby when lockdowns sent them all home in March 2020. The situation challenged their work and their mental health. As they adapted to these experiences,...

Season 2, Episode 2 -- Future of Work (part 2): Adapting to Change 08.06.2022

In Season 2 of Science in Parallel, we're examining how pandemic shutdowns have reshaped computational science workplaces. In our last episode we focused on the effects of virtual work and how the Exascale Computing Project's Strategies for Working Remotely panel series fostered communication and creativity. This episode brings in additional stories from graduate students, a professor and an early...

Season 2, Episode 1 -- Future of Work (part 1): Communication Conundrum 01.06.2022

In our first two episodes of Science in Parallel 's Season 2, we'll be talking about how the pandemic pivot to remote work marks a turning point in workplace structure for many computational scientists.  We talk with computational scientists who worked remotely about what they struggled with, what functioned well and the lessons they'll take into the future. In this first part, we'll also focus on...

Season 1, Episode 6 -- Aurora Pribram-Jones 27.10.2021

Aurora Pribram-Jones works on hot, dense electrons – simulating extreme chemistry that can happen within giant planets like Jupiter or nuclear fusion experiments. Aurora's career included many initial detours on the way to science, but the flexibility of community college classes and a job at a technical bookstore paved their path toward research. Now a member of the chemistry faculty at the Unive...

Season 1, Episode 5 -- Alternative Energy 13.10.2021

Avoiding the changing climate's most extreme impacts will require a technological revolution to power daily life from renewable sources. An entrepreneur, an engineering professor and a DOE-laboratory materials scientist – all DOE CSGF and Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni – discuss technical challenges from nuclear energy to heat transfer to hydrogen generation and the importance of cho...

Season 1, Episode 4 -- Alicia Magann 29.09.2021

Alicia Magann got her start in control systems engineering research, exploring tools for controlling large-scale chemical processes. As a Ph. D. student, she turned the dials of quantum chemistry in Herschel Rabitz's research group at Princeton University with support from the DOE CSGF. She talks about her work on quantum algorithms, her cross-country road trip from New Jersey to her practicum in...

Season 1, Episode 3 -- Quentarius Moore 15.09.2021

Curiosity, mentors and a summer working in concrete with his grandfather shaped Quentarius Moore's science career studying 2-D materials. He recently completed his fourth year as a DOE CSGF recipient, while pursuing a chemistry Ph. D. at Texas A&M University. He completed both his bachelor's and master's degrees in chemistry at Jackson State University in Mississippi. Read more about Quentarius an...

Science in Parallel -- Season One Trailer 02.09.2021

Welcome to Science in Parallel , a new podcast about people and projects in computational science. Science in Parallel is produced by the Krell Institute, and season one celebrates the 30th anniversary of the Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship Program.

Season 1, Episode 2 -- Artificial Intelligence and Climate Change 15.07.2021

One of today's hottest areas of computational research could help build better solutions for one of global society's steepest challenges. Three early career computational scientists talk about AI's potential for understanding and predicting climate shifts, supporting strategies for incorporating renewable energy, and engineering other approaches that reduce carbon emissions. They also describe how...

Season 1, Episode 1 -- Jeff Hittinger 15.07.2021

Jeff Hittinger of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory embodies the term scientist-chimera. He talks about the many scientific hats he's worn simultaneously – computer scientist, applied mathematician and physicist. As director for the Center for Applied Computing (CASC) and as co-principal investigator for the DOE CSGF, he wears many more. He talks about scientific success, leadership and the t...

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