Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have released pbdR 1.0, a full suite of software packages they developed to make the R programming language easy to use for high-performance computing.
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Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory are examining the diverse supercomputing workflow management systems in use in the United States and around the world to help supercomputers work together more effectively and efficient
A cross-disciplinary research team at Oak Ridge National Laboratory is using supercomputing to create an unprecedented view of the 3D interactions among components of the cellular machinery in Populus trichocarpa (black cottonwood)
A numerical weather forecasting model (WRF) was used to simulate 120 storms over the Alabama-Coosa-Tallapoosa (ACT) river basin to explore the effect of climate change on probable maximum precipitation (PMP).
Researchers proposed a cryogenic memory cell design that has a potential to substantially outperform the existing memory cells, achieve much faster access times and lower access and dissipation energies, and reduce the size of the memory cell.
Inside Science has published a story about a recent experiment by ORNL researchers Brian Williams, Ron Sadlier, and Travis Humble.
Joseph M. Lukens, Nicholas A. Peters, and Raphael C.
ZAEL 1, Inc., a Miami, Florida startup, has entered into an exclusive research and development license with commercial option for an ORNL standoff spectroscopy detection system.
Raphael C. Pooser and Benjamin Lawrie have been recognized as authors of one of Optica’s top 15 most-cited papers for 2015 for "Ultrasensitive measurement of microcantilever displacement below the shot-noise limit," Optica 2, 393-399 (2015).