seminario semanal - Física nuclear
Hola a Todos,
les copio info del siguiente seminario de los martes.
saludos
Rolo
------------------------------
Please join us for our next Rising Researchers seminar on Tuesday, March 7th at 10:30 AM Pacific Time by Kyle Godbey - Facility for Rare Isotope Beams.
The seminar is fully virtual. Please find the Zoom link below.
Title:
Non-Affinity and Beyond: Towards Robust Uncertainty Quantification For Real-Time Nuclear Dynamics
Abstract:
Despite the plentiful computational resources at our fingertips in the exascale era, direct Bayesian calibration of physical models still remains a daunting task. Even with fully quantified models, systematic studies and properly exploring your posteriors can still pose significant computational hardship. In this talk I will present recent work in the development of physics-informed emulators that will enable (relatively) quick calibration and evaluation of microscopic models, discuss our future goals to extend such methods to time-dependent systems, and show some strategies for making the tools and data both available and accessible. Finally, I will sketch an optimistic framework that will allow this machinery to be agile in the face of new data coming from next-generation experimental facilities.
Zoom link:
https://wustl.zoom.us/j/92863708105
Sincerely,
Rising Researchers Seminar Series Committee
les copio info del siguiente seminario de los martes.
saludos
Rolo
------------------------------
Please join us for our next Rising Researchers seminar on Tuesday, March 7th at 10:30 AM Pacific Time by Kyle Godbey - Facility for Rare Isotope Beams.
The seminar is fully virtual. Please find the Zoom link below.
Title:
Non-Affinity and Beyond: Towards Robust Uncertainty Quantification For Real-Time Nuclear Dynamics
Abstract:
Despite the plentiful computational resources at our fingertips in the exascale era, direct Bayesian calibration of physical models still remains a daunting task. Even with fully quantified models, systematic studies and properly exploring your posteriors can still pose significant computational hardship. In this talk I will present recent work in the development of physics-informed emulators that will enable (relatively) quick calibration and evaluation of microscopic models, discuss our future goals to extend such methods to time-dependent systems, and show some strategies for making the tools and data both available and accessible. Finally, I will sketch an optimistic framework that will allow this machinery to be agile in the face of new data coming from next-generation experimental facilities.
Zoom link:
https://wustl.zoom.us/j/92863708105
Sincerely,
Rising Researchers Seminar Series Committee
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