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Welcome to the 2025 RMACC HPC Symposium!
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Tuesday, May 20
 

2:30pm MDT

Gaining file system intelligence and operational efficiency with the VAST data platform
Tuesday May 20, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm MDT
As the shape and demands of large scale computing environments have evolved, so have the needs of those who are responsible for keeping them in tip top shape. HPC administrators are challenged with knowing what the data on their system looks like, who’s doing what to the data and tracking jobs on the system. In this talk we’ll cover how the VAST data platform’s powerful structured data component and analytics makes these tasks easy.
Speakers
Tuesday May 20, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm MDT
Room 206

3:15pm MDT

Dell Session
Tuesday May 20, 2025 3:15pm - 4:15pm MDT
Tuesday May 20, 2025 3:15pm - 4:15pm MDT
Room 206

4:30pm MDT

Watching Electrons Move
Tuesday May 20, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm MDT
Since their discovery in the late 1800’s, electrons have been a constant source of study for scientists. Their properties and behavior have been studied and harnessed to produce some of the greatest inventions of the past century, including electron microscopes and particle accelerators. However one fundamental question about their behavior still remains: how do electrons move inside atoms and molecules?
Electron motion within atoms has proved difficult to study due to the incredibly short timescale it occurs on (the attosecond timescale, or 10-18 seconds). One method of capturing electron motion is to use very short laser pulses to take a series of snapshots of the system. This requires laser pulses shorter than the duration of the dynamics we want to observe (similar to using a short flash on a camera to obtain an image of a fast-moving object). The means to do this have only become possible in the past decade with the advent of new ultrashort (less than 100 as) lasers, which have become feasible due to a process called high‐harmonic generation (HHG).
However, these ultrashort lasers are difficult to produce and characterize experimentally, so theoretical and computational methods are often used in the field of attoscience. These methods are also not without their limitations – modelling the correlated behavior of electrons requires significant computing resources, and so High-Performance Computing (HPC) resources are often used to perform these calculations. In this seminar I will present recent results obtained using R-Matrix with Time-dependence (RMT) method calculations performed on national HPC resources, firstly to treat high-harmonic generation in two-color laser fields, and then on applications of the attosecond pulses generated during the HHG process to measure ionization delays.
Speakers
KH

Kathryn Hamilton

University of Colorado Denver
Tuesday May 20, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm MDT
Room 206
 
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