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X-WR-CALNAME:Michigan Institute for Computational Discovery and Engineering
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://micde.umich.edu
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Michigan Institute for Computational Discovery and Engineering
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20200124T130000
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DTSTAMP:20230905T171341Z
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UID:10000312-1579870800-1579874400@micde.umich.edu
SUMMARY:MICDE Seminar: Andrew Wetzel\, Assistant Professor\, Physics\, University of California\, Davis
DESCRIPTION:Bio: Professor Wetzel is an assistant professor in the physics department and in the astrophysics and cosmology group at the University of California\, Davis. He is a theoretical/computational astrophysicist and cosmologist. Using the world’s most powerful supercomputers\, he generates cosmological simulations to model the formation of cosmic structures\, including galaxies and their stars. He uses these simulations as theoretical laboratories to develop and test models of galaxy formation\, stellar dynamics\, and the nature of dark matter\, with emphasis on our own Milky Way galaxy. \nSimulating the Milky Way\nThe Gaia satellite mission\, together with a multitude of ground-based observational surveys\, now measure 6-D phase-space coordinates and multi-species elemental abundances for hundreds of millions of stars across the Milky Way. This new era of galactic archeology and near-field cosmology demands a new generation of simulations that achieve high dynamic range to resolve scales of individual stellar populations within a cosmological context. I will describe the new Latte suite of massively parallelized cosmological zoom-in simulations\, run on the nation’s most powerful supercomputers\, that model the formation of Milky Way-like galaxies at parsec-scale resolution\, using the FIRE (Feedback in Realistic Environments) model for star formation and feedback. First I will discuss the formation of the Milky Way disk\, including resolving for the first time the dynamics and lifetimes of giant molecular clouds and stars clusters at z = 0. These simulations also self-consistently resolve the formation of satellite dwarf galaxies around each Milky Way-like host. These low-mass galaxies have presented significant challenges to the cold dark matter model\, but I will show progress in addressing the “missing satellites” and “too-big-to-fail” problems. Finally\, I will discuss synthetic Milky Way surveys that we have created from the Latte simulations\, which are publicly available\, to provide theoretical modeling insight for the era of Gaia. \nProf. Wetzel is being hosted by Prof. Gnedin (Astronomy).  If you would like to meet with him during his visit\, please send an email to micde-events@umich.edu. If you are an MICDE graduate student and would like to join Prof. Wetzel for lunch please RSVP by Thursday\, January 23. 
URL:https://micde.umich.edu/event/micde-seminar-andrew-wetzel-uc-davis/
LOCATION:411 West Hall (1085 S. University)\, 1085 S. University Ave\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48109\, United States
CATEGORIES:Featured Events,MICDE Seminar Series,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://micde.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Andrew-Wetzel.png
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20200131T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20200131T163000
DTSTAMP:20230905T171340Z
CREATED:20230905T171340Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230905T171340Z
UID:10000331-1580484600-1580488200@micde.umich.edu
SUMMARY:MICDE Seminar: Amir Salaree\, Postdoctoral Fellow\, Earth and Environmental Sciences\, University of Michigan
DESCRIPTION:Due to unforeseen circumstances the originally scheduled talk by Professor Brandon Johnson has been cancelled and replaced with the following seminar. \nTheoretical and Computational Contributions to the Modeling of Global Tsunamis\nThe distribution of tsunami amplitudes in the open ocean is controlled by source mechanism as well as bathymetry geometry and resolution\, with the latter controlling far-field tsunami features. However\, large detailed bathymetry grids result in long computer simulation times for tsunamis. It is therefore of interest to investigate the amount of physical detail in bathymetric grids that control the most important features in tsunami amplitudes\, to assess what constitutes sufficient level for grids in numerical simulations. By decomposing the Pacific bathymetry using a spherical harmonics approach one can create “smoothed” versions of the original field. Using these simplified bathymetries to simulate tsunamis from potential ruptures around the Pacific\, we can see that for large megathrust events (M0=1029 dyn-cm)\, only a resolution of ~1000 km (equivalent to l=40)\, or ~1% surface smoothness of the Pacific is needed in order to reproduce the main components of the true distribution of tsunami amplitudes. This would result in simpler simulations\, and faster computations in the context of tsunami warning algorithms. \nIn a separate context\, an overview of tsunami studies and a report on a study of a meteotsunami are presented. These scenarios are evidence for the fact that tsunami studies are interdisciplinary fields of research that require coordinated efforts by investigators from various backgrounds. \nMICDE is co-hosting this seminar with the Earth and Environmental Sciences department. 
URL:https://micde.umich.edu/event/micde-seminar-brandon-johnson-purdue/
LOCATION:RM1528\, 1100 North University Building
CATEGORIES:Featured Events,MICDE Seminar Series,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://micde.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Amir-Salaree.png
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