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DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20210119T160000
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CREATED:20230905T171257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230905T171257Z
UID:10000427-1611072000-1611075600@micde.umich.edu
SUMMARY:MICDE Seminar: Yang Liu\, Research Scientist\, Scalable Solvers Group of the Computational Research Division at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
DESCRIPTION:About Dr. Liu: Yang Liu is a research scientist in the Scalable Solvers Group of the Computational Research Division at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory\, in Berkeley\, California. Dr. Liu received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the University of Michigan in 2015. From 2015 to 2017\, he worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the Radiation Laboratory\, University of Michigan. From 2017 to 2019\, he worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. His main research interest is in numerical linear and multi-linear algebras (including sparse solvers\, randomized low-rank\, butterfly and tensor algebras)\, computational electromagnetics (including fast iterative time-domain integral equation solvers\, fast direct integral and differential equation solvers\, and multi-physics\nmodeling)\, scalable machine learning algorithms\, and high-performance scientific computing. Dr. Liu authored and co-authored the Sergei A. Schelkunoff Transactions Prize Paper\, APS 2018\, second place student paper\, ACES 2012\, and the first place student paper\, FEM 2014. \nFAST\, DIRECT INTEGRAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATION SOLVERS FOR ELECTROMAGNETIC ACOUSTIC\, AND ELASTIC APPLICATIONS AT ALL FREQUENCY RANGES: Large-scale and full-wave modeling for acoustic and elastic inversion applications\, analysis and synthesis of electromagnetic systems for traditional and emerging RF\, microwave\, terahertz applications rely on efficient numerical tools. Integral equation (i.e.\, method of moment) and differential equation (e.g.\, finite-difference\, finite-element\, and finite-volume) formulations lead to dense and sparse linear systems\, respectively. These linear systems can be solved by either iterative or direct solvers. Iterative solvers\, despite their success in constructing well-conditioned formulations and fast multipole-type algorithms\, remain inefficient for systems that are inherently ill-conditioned and/or require multiple right-hand sides. This is particularly true for design automation\, inverse scattering\, and other coupled systems where iterative solvers often require forbiddingly high iteration time. Direct solvers\, in stark contrast\, can attain reliable solutions in a predictable time. However\, exact direct solvers typically require O(N 3 ) and O(N 2 ) computational costs for dense and sparse systems of size N\, respectively. Fast direct solvers\, on the other hand\, rely on the fact that off-diagonal blocks of the well-ordered linear systems can be compressed by numerical linear algebra tools including low-rank and butterfly decompositions. When further embedded in hierarchical matrix frameworks\, such as H-matrix\, hierarchically off-diagonal low-rank (HODLR)\, and hierarchically semi-separable (HSS) formats\, these direct solvers and preconditioners can achieve quasi-linear complexities for construction\, factorization and solution for the discretized systems across all frequency ranges. We will review the development of these solvers in the past two decades\, with an emphasis on their butterfly-based variants and distributed-memory parallelization for high-frequency problems. An open source package integrating most techniques reviewed\, called ButterflyPACK\, will also be introduced. \n\nWatch the full webinar. \nNote: You can register after the webinar has started.
URL:https://micde.umich.edu/event/micde-aim-seminar-yang-liu-research-scientist-scalable-solvers-group-of-the-computational-research-division-at-the-lawrence-berkeley-national-laboratory/
LOCATION:Zoom Event\, MI\, United States
CATEGORIES:Featured Events,MICDE Seminar Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://micde.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Yang-Liu.png
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20210126T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20210126T160000
DTSTAMP:20260607T023032
CREATED:20230905T171256Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230905T171256Z
UID:10000406-1611673200-1611676800@micde.umich.edu
SUMMARY:MICDE Seminar: Tianle Yuan\, Associate Research Scientist\, University of Maryland\, Baltimore County\, JCET\, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
DESCRIPTION:About Dr. Tianle Yuan: Dr. Yuan received his B.S. in Geophysics and Computer Science from Peking University\, his Ph.D. from the University of Maryland\, College Park in 2008. After graduation\, he became affiliated with the Joint Center for Earth Systems Technologies (JCET) at the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC) and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) as an Associate Research Scientist. His research interests include cloud and aerosol climate feedback\, aerosol-cloud interactions\, remote sensing\, cloud physics\, and application of ML/Deep Learning in Earth science. In deep learning applications\, Dr. Yuan published a few papers in modeling sub-grid clouds\, global scale clouds\, hurricane prediction\, finding ship-tracks\, and supervised and unsupervised cloud morphology classifications. \nARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE-BASED CLOUD DISTRIBUTOR (AI-CD): MODELING CLOUDS AT DIFFERENT SCALES\nHere we introduce the artificial intelligence-based cloud distributor (AI-CD) approach to generate cloud fields across different scales and cloud types. We show that generative adversarial nets (GANs) can not only generate realistic cloud fields with corresponding meteorological variables\, but also capture known physical relationship between cloud fields and meteorological variables such as sea surface temperature\, atmospheric stability\, and relative humidity etc. We demonstrate that this approach works across a large range of spatial scales: from individual grid points (sub-grid process modeling)\, multiple grids\, to global scale. In addition\, the AI-CD approach is stochastic in nature. We suggest the AI-CD approach can be used as a data-drive framework for stochastic cloud parameterization. \n\nThe MICDE Winter 2021 Seminar Series is open to all. University of Michigan faculty and students interested in computational and data sciences are encouraged to attend. \nRegister to immediately receive Zoom details. Note: you may register after the event has started. \nQuestions? Email MICDE-events@umich.edu
URL:https://micde.umich.edu/event/micde-seminar-tianle-yuan-research-associate-nasa-goddard-space-flight-center/
LOCATION:Zoom Event
CATEGORIES:Featured Events,MICDE Seminar Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://micde.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Tianle-Yuan.png
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