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Department of Energy Awards 17 Computational Science Graduate Fellowships
Ames, IA – In a continuing effort to address the shortage of
computational scientists in the United States, the Department of Energy
developed an effective and innovative fellowship program. Now in its sixteenth
year, the Department of Energy’s Computational Science Graduate Fellowship
Program (DOE CSGF) has been successfully training the next generation of
scientific leaders.
Jointly funded by the Office of Science and the National Nuclear Security
Administration’s Office of Defense Programs,
the Fellowship provides up to four years of support to students pursuing
a Ph.D. whose studies focus on using high-performance computing technology
to solve complex problems in science and engineering. Students selected for
the fellowships have backgrounds in a scientific or engineering discipline,
computer science, or applied mathematics, and agree to study and conduct
research in computational science.
The DOE CSGF provides fellows with benefits that include a yearly stipend of
$31,200; payment of all tuition and fees; and funds for computers and
travel to conferences. Fellows in this program participate in a highly
regarded annual fellowship conference and complete a three-month practicum
at a Department of Energy laboratory.
Each applicant for this highly competitive fellowship must provide a
transcript, GRE scores, and a detailed program of study; in addition,
three letters of reference are required from advisors, instructors
and employers familiar with the applicant’s background and capabilities.
These materials undergo careful scrutiny by a committee of distinguished
people from the academic world and DOE national laboratories.
The Krell Institute, which administers the Fellowship, takes pleasure in
announcing the awardees for the 2007-2008 academic year:
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Matthew Adams
University of Washington
Computational Electromagnetics
Gregory Crosswhite
University of Washington
Physics
Hal Finkel
Yale University
Physics
Robin Friedman
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Computational and Systems Biology
Steven Hamilton
Georgia Institute of Technology
Nuclear Engineering
Joshua Hykes
Pennsylvania State University
Nuclear Engineering
Milo Lin
California Institute of Technology
Physics
Paul Loriaux
University of California, San Diego
Computational Biology
James Martin
University of Texas at Austin
Computational and Applied Mathematics
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Geoffrey Oxberry
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Chemical Kinetics/Transport Phenomena
Troy Perkins
University of California, Davis
Theoretical Ecology
Matthew Reuter
Northwestern University
Theoretical Chemistry
Sarah Richardson
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Human Genetics and Molecular Biology
Danilo Scepanovic
Harvard University/Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Signal processing/modeling
Paul Sutter
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Cosmology
Cameron Talischi
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Structural Engineering & Applied Mathematics
John Ziegler
California Institute of Technology
Aerospace
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For more information on the Computational Science Graduate
Fellowship program, please contact the fellowship administrator, the
Krell Institute, at 515-956-3696,
visit the CSGF home page,
or email
csgf@krellinst.org .
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