Supercomputing 2021 – Gordon Bell COVID-19 Special Prize Finalist – Team Intelligent Resolution
Integrating Cryo-EM with AI-DrivenMulti-Resolution Simulations to Observe the SARS-CoV-2 Replication-Transcription Machinery in Action
Integrating Cryo-EM with AI-DrivenMulti-Resolution Simulations to Observe the SARS-CoV-2 Replication-Transcription Machinery in Action
Search time for usable antiviral candidates reduced from years to minutes.
At SC21, Dr. Venkatram Vishwanath (Data Science Team Lead, Argonne Leadership Computing Facility), Jessica Liu (Product Director, Cerebras Systems), and Rebecca Lewington (Technology Evangelist, Cerebras Systems) discuss Argonne’s work with a Cerebras CS-2 system and ALCF’s new AI Testbed.
Argonne scientists part of team nominated for supercomputing prize.
Researchers from across the world will use supercomputers at Argonne and Oak Ridge National Laboratories to pursue transformational advances in science and engineering.
This visualization shows the results of a state-of-the-art 3D simulation of supernova explosion and neutron-star birth. Highlighted among others things is the deep core that is shrinking after explosion due to neutrino cooling and deleptonization on its way to becoming a cold, compact neutron star.
This visualization shows the turbulent motion of air inside the cylinder of a piston-engine. Of particular interest are the high cycle-to-cycle variations (CCV), especially near complex geometric features like spark-plugs, which are caused by large-scale variations in flow structures and multi-physical phenomena that affect performance.
Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory will share the laboratory’s research and expertise in high performance computing (HPC) at the 33rd International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage, and Analysis. Known widely as SC21, the annual conference will be held November 14-19, 2021, in St. Louis as a hybrid event with both in-person and virtual attendees.
Argonne’s Valerie Taylor will be featured as the Distinguished Speaker at the International Women in HPC Workshop entitled “Diversifying the HPC Community and Engaging Male Allies.” The workshop, the eleventh in the series, will celebrate the success of women in HPC, their recruitment, and the mentoring of women in the workforce. This year’s workshop will
Argonne’s featured DOE booth speaker, Arvind Ramanathan, will present “AI-driven Adaptive Multiresolution Molecular Simulations on Heterogeneous Computing Platforms.” The talk will address how emerging hardware tailored for artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) provides a novel means to couple AI and ML methods with traditional high performance computing (HPC) workflows involving molecular dynamics (MD)