History

Lin Mu (2016)

Lin Mu
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Dr. Lin Mu is currently the Householder Fellow in Computer Science and Mathematics Division at ORNL. Dr. Mu received her Ph.D. in Applied Science from the University of Arkansas in 2013 and her M.Sc. in Computational Mathematics from Xi'an Jiaotong University in 2009. She was a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Mathematics at Michigan State University. Dr. Mu's areas of interest include: Applied Mathematics, Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing; Theory and Application of Finite Element Methods, Adaptive Methods, Mixed Finite Element Methods, A Posteriori Error Estimations; Weak Galerkin finite element methods; Multiscale finite element methods and the Application of Mathematical techniques to chemistry, biology and material sciences.

 

 

Pablo Seleson (2015)

Pablo Seleson
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Pablo Seleson is currently the Alston S. Householder Fellow in the Computational and Applied Mathematics Group of the Computer Science and Mathematics Division. Dr. Seleson received both his Bachelor's degree in Physics and in Philosophy and his Master's degree in Physics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2002 and 2006, respectively. He obtained his Ph.D. in Computational Science from Florida State University in 2010, under the advisement of Prof. Max Gunzburger. After graduation, he joined the Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences (ICES) at The University of Texas at Austin as an ICES Postdoctoral Fellow under the supervision of Prof. J. Tinsley Oden, where he also worked in close collaboration with the Computer Science Research Institute at Sandia National Laboratories. Dr. Seleson's research focuses on multiscale material modeling and in mathematical and computational analysis of peridynamics and related nonlocal models.​

 

 

Guannan Zhang (2012)

Guannan Zhang
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Dr. Zhang received his Bachelor's degree in Mathematics from the School of Mathematics at Shandong University in the summer of 2007. Under the advisement of Professors Weidong Zhao and Shige Peng, he obtained his first Master's degree in Mathematics in the summer of 2010, also from the School of Mathematics at Shandong University. He enrolled in the doctoral program in Computational Science at Florida State University during the summer of 2009; under the supervision of Max Gunzburger. He obtained his second Master's degree in the fall of 2011 and completed his Ph. D. in the summer of 2012. Dr. Zhang's research focuses on uncertainty quantification(UQ) including numerical methods for stochastic partial differential equations, stochastic calibration and optimization methods for inverse problems and many related applications.

 

 

 

Cory Hauck (2009)

Cory Hauck
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Dr. Hauck received his Bachelor's degree in Physics and Mathematics from the University of South Carolina in 1997 and, shortly after graduating, took an engineering position at Doty Scientific, Inc. in Columbia, SC. In 1999, he attended graduate school at the University of Maryland, receiving a Master's Degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering in 2004 and a Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics in 2006. Before coming to Oak Ridge, he was a postdoctoral research associate with the Center for Nonlinear Studies at the Computational Physics and Methods group at Los Alamos. Dr. Hauck's research to date has focused on computational aspects of kinetic theory and hyperbolic PDE.

 

 

 

Ralf Deiterding (2006)

Richard Archibald (2005)

Jennifer Ryan (2003)

Chao Yang (1999)

Tamara G. Kolda (1997)

Ren-Cang Li (1995)

Noel M. Nachtigal (1993)

Karin A. Remington (1992)

June M. Donato (1991)

Elizabeth R. Jessup (1990)