Doctoral student Caroline Mallary's research work gets some media attention (here and here).
CSCDR faculty awarded NSF grant
August 28, 2018
Arghavan Louhghalam (PI) and Mazdak Tootkaboni (co-PI) were awarded $224,341 through National Science Foundation CMMI division to study A Data-centric Uncertainty-informed Framework for Resilience Analytics of Critical Infrastructure Under Extreme Climate Events.
Center Directors served as guest editors of IEEE journal
August 23, 2018
Center Directors served as guest editors of a special issue of CiSE titled Supercomputing-Enabled Advances in Science and Engineering. The issue is available here."
CSCDR faculty awarded NSF grant
August 8, 2018
Scott Field was awarded $193,000 through the National Science Foundation's gravitational physics program to develop and use high-accuracy numerical models of gravitational wave radiation.
CSCDR faculty member featured in NYT article on floods in Thailand
July 12, 2018
The recent New York Times article, Does Climate Change Have Anything to Do With Floods in Thailand?, features CSCDR faculty member Amit Tandon. Professor Tandon studies ocean systems using a combination of analytical modeling and high-performance computing techniques.
A new on-campus supercomputer to be built
May 3, 2018
CSCDR faculty members Sigal Gottlieb (PI), Vanni Bucci (co-PI), Yanlai Chen (co-PI), Geoffrey Cowles (co-PI), Bo Dong (co-PI), Scott Field (co-PI), Alfa Heryudono (co-PI), Gaurav Khanna (co-PI), Maricris Mayes (co-PI), Mehdi Raessi (co-PI), Amit Tandon (co-PI), and Mazdak Tootkaboni (co-PI) were recently awarded $643,899 through the Office of Naval Research's Defense University Research Instrumentation Program, “A Heterogeneous Terascale Computing Cluster for the Development of GPU Optimized High-order Numerical Methods”. These funds will allow the CSCDR to bring a new, state-of-the-art supercomputing cluster to the UMassD campus.
Supercomputing with PlayStation!
May 1, 2018
Data Center Dynamics just published a thoroughly researched story about Sony PlayStations and their supercomputing legacy, with a detailed interview with our own, Professor Khanna. The story appears on page 44 of the April/May issue.
Professor devises a new model to treat digestive health issues
April 17, 2018
In the attempt to treat several digestive ailments such as inflammatory or allergic diseases, doctors and scientists did not have an accurate prediction system to find the right balance of bacteria to produce a healthy gut. But now, due to the research conducted by CSCDR faculty member Vanni Bucci alongside colleagues at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, a prediction model exists that could yield effective tools in the quest for digestive health. Read more about their work here.
Professor overturns understanding on black holes
March 29, 2018
Dr. Gaurav Khanna published a paper that sheds new light on space's most mysterious phenomena. With collaborators, Dr Khanna demonstrates the existence of extreme black holes that until now were thought to be theoretical and unobservable. Extreme black holes differ from traditional black holes because they have the fastest possible spin allowed by Einstein’s theory of relativity. This work upends conventional wisdom on extreme black holes, which presumed these objects were unstable, and thus did not exist in nature.
Recent PhD graduate Zachary Grant is featured in SIAM's prize spotlight
March 18, 2018
Zachary J. Grant of University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth received the 2017 SIAM Student Paper Prize and presented his winning paper at the SIAM Annual Meeting, held July 10-14, 2017 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. SIAM recognized Grant for the paper, Explicit Strong Stability Preserving Multistage Two-Derivative Time-Stepping Schemes, co-authored with Andrew Christlieb of Michigan State University, Sigal Gottlieb of the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, and David C. Seal of the United States Naval Academy. The paper was published in Journal of Scientific Computing in 2016. An interview with Zach appears in SIAMs spotlight and campus highlights.
Journal paper highlighted for cutting edge black hole research.
February 6, 2018
CSCDR Director Prof. Gaurav Khanna's recent paper with Richard was one of small handful of papers selected for special recognition by the Classical & Quantum Gravity journal. It appears on their 2017 Highlights listing.
Physics students publish papers in top research journals