
7 Nov 2022
One of the major events of the supercomputing year is coming, and Berkeley Lab Computing Sciences Area (CSA) staff will be there to learn, connect, and share their knowledge with the HPC community. The Supercomputing Conference 2022 (SC22) will take place November 13-18 in Dallas, primarily in person for the first time since 2019.
CSA researchers, scientists, and engineers are participating in tutorials, workshops, panels, technical papers, and posters as part of the conference's technical program. In addition, the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) booth – which showcases the 17 DOE national laboratories – will feature high-level talks and technical demonstrations from the labs, some in person, some online.
Program Highlights
Featured Technical Talk: Quantum Communication – A Physics Experiment or a Network Paradigm Shift?
Inder Monga
Sunday, November 13
3:30-4:10 p.m. - C156
Gordon Bell Prize Finalist Session 1: Pushing the Frontier in the Design of Laser-Based Electron Accelerators with Groundbreaking Mesh-Refined Particle-In-Cell Simulations on Exascale-Class Supercomputers
Luca Fedeli, Axel Huebl, France Boillod-Cerneux, Thomas Clark, Kevin Gott, Conrad Hillairet, Stephan Jaure, Adrien Leblanc, Rémi Lehe, Andrew Myers, Christelle Piechurski, Mitsuhisa Sato, Neil Zaïm, Weiqun Zhang, Jean-Luc Vay, Henri Vincenti
Tuesday, November 15
11:30 a.m.-12 p.m. - C144-145
Gordon Bell Finalist Session 1: Extreme-Scale Many-against-Many Protein Similarity Search
Oguz Selvitopi, Saliya Ekanayake, Giulia Guidi, Muaaz Awan, Georgios Pavlopoulos, Ariful Azad, Nikos Kyrpides, Leonid Oliker, Katherine Yelick, Aydin Buluç
Tuesday, November 15
10:30-11 a.m. - C144-145
Birds of a Feather: Top500 Supercomputers
Erich Strohmeier, Jack Dongarra, Horst Simon, Martin Meuer
Tuesday, November 15
5:15-6:45 p.m. - Dallas Ballroom/Omni Hotel
[Image]
Berkeley Lab Computing Sciences summer student Muna Tageldin presents her research at the summer student poster session.