Using Summit, the world’s most powerful supercomputer housed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, a team led by Argonne National Laboratory ran three of the largest cosmological simulations known to date.
Filter News
Area of Research
- (-) Supercomputing (55)
- Advanced Manufacturing (1)
- Biology and Environment (3)
- Building Technologies (1)
- Clean Energy (13)
- Climate and Environmental Systems (1)
- Computational Biology (1)
- Computational Engineering (3)
- Computer Science (14)
- Fusion and Fission (2)
- Materials (7)
- Materials for Computing (2)
- Mathematics (1)
- National Security (2)
- Neutron Science (6)
- Quantum information Science (10)
In a step toward advancing small modular nuclear reactor designs, scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory have run reactor simulations on ORNL supercomputer Summit with greater-than-expected computational efficiency.
Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory are working to understand both the complex nature of uranium and the various oxide forms it can take during processing steps that might occur throughout the nuclear fuel cycle.
Using artificial neural networks designed to emulate the inner workings of the human brain, deep-learning algorithms deftly peruse and analyze large quantities of data.
Three ORNL computer scientists headed the 2018 DOE ASCR Basic Research Needs Workshop on Extreme Heterogeneity and development of its final report.
The unique process of accepting a new supercomputer is one of the most challenging projects a programmer may take on during a career.
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., March 11, 2019—An international collaboration including scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory solved a 50-year-old puzzle that explains why beta decays of atomic nuclei
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., March 4, 2019—A team of researchers from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory Health Data Sciences Institute have harnessed the power of artificial intelligence to better match cancer patients with clinical trials.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists have created open source software that scales up analysis of motor designs to run on the fastest computers available, including those accessible to outside users at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility.
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., Feb.