From walid.benmansour at mq.edu.au Sun Jan 5 23:47:19 2020 From: walid.benmansour at mq.edu.au (Walid Ben Mansour) Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2020 07:47:19 +0000 Subject: [CIG-ALL] Call for abstracts EGU 2020, Session GD2-3: Thermochemical imaging of the mantle: from observables to modelling Message-ID: Dear colleagues, We would like to draw your attention to the session GD2.3- Thermochemical imaging of the mantle: from observables to modelling at the EGU General Assembly 2020 in Vienna and hope that you will consider submitting an abstract to this session. The abstract submission deadline is 15 Jan 2020. Session description: The thermochemical structure of Earth mantle is key information to better understand its dynamics and its evolution in time. In the last 20 years, several approaches were suggested from seismological observations, experimental geophysics, and computational geochemistry to improve our understanding of the thermochemical structure beneath cratonic areas, subduction zones or mantle upwellings. The development of high-performance computational infrastructures (HPCI) and new algorithms to manage the processing of big data brings new opportunities to produce high-resolution images and a better understanding of mantle dynamics. This session wishes to bring together contributions from experimental geophysics and computational geochemistry to large scale geodynamics, which is aimed at imaging and modelling thermochemical structure on different time scales. Presentations of new methods combining multiple observations of geophysical and geochemical datasets with regional to global geophysical modelling are particularly encouraged.” Solicited speaker: Saskia Goes (Imperial College, London) With best regards Walid Ben Mansour (Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia) Laura Cobden (Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands) Bernhard Steinberger (GFZ Postdam, Postdam, Germany) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ljhwang at ucdavis.edu Mon Jan 6 10:21:52 2020 From: ljhwang at ucdavis.edu (Lorraine Hwang) Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2020 10:21:52 -0800 Subject: [CIG-ALL] 2020 CIDER Summer Program Message-ID: <29A57A39-E088-4A81-8A88-01CC676A6EDE@ucdavis.edu> 2020 CIDER Summer Program June 28 - July 24, 2020 “Earth as an Inhabited World” CIDER announces their annual summer program on behalf of the geosciences community. This summer program focuses on the evolution of physical and chemical conditions that allowed life to gain a foothold. This broad program will cover the details of planetary formation and the subsequent evolution of this initial state through the early Earth and through the onset of plate tectonics. At each stage, we explore the interplay between Earth’s surface environment and the evolution of the interior. Lectures and tutorials will be organized around four topical subdivisions: planetary formation and interiors, surfaces and their habitability, atmospheres and climate, and planetary processes and observations (including exoplanets). The organizers and program committee can be found at https://deep-earth.org/summer20 The program features a 4 week tutorial and research program for about 40 advanced graduate students and postdocs. We also welcome scientists at assistant professor/researcher level (and higher) to participate in any part of the program, with a minimum commitment of 2 weeks. The summer program will be held on the campus of University of California, Santa Barbara. It is supported by the NSF/CSEDI program. Applications are invited for both senior and junior participate at https://www.deep-earth.org/summer20 Follow the link to the application page. Application deadline: Feb. 28, 2020 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ljhwang at ucdavis.edu Mon Jan 6 11:01:10 2020 From: ljhwang at ucdavis.edu (Lorraine Hwang) Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2020 11:01:10 -0800 Subject: [CIG-ALL] Postdoctoral Positions at CIG: Deadline January 26 Message-ID: <41F0FA3E-9320-4F76-9BFB-83A6A8B0D1E3@ucdavis.edu> Postdoctoral Positions: Computational Geodynamics and Software Engineering Interested in developing software for the geodynamics community and promoting software best practices? Applications are invited for two Postdoctoral Researchers who are interested in joining the CIG team at UC Davis. The positions are expected to contribute to the development and support of numerical modeling codes in geodynamics and towards conducting independent research. We seek proposals for innovative, original, and feasible software engineering and/or software development projects that complement and/or improve our current practices. CIG supports communities in computational science, dynamo, education, long-term tectonics, mantle convection, multiphysics, seismology, and short-term crustal dynamics. For more details and to apply: https://recruit.ucdavis.edu/JPF03269 2 For more information contact Lorraine Hwang: ljhwang at ucdavis.edu . Deadline to apply: Sunday, Jan 26, 2020 at 11:59pm (Pacific Time) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ljhwang at ucdavis.edu Mon Jan 6 16:24:05 2020 From: ljhwang at ucdavis.edu (Lorraine Hwang) Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2020 16:24:05 -0800 Subject: [CIG-ALL] 2020-2021 CIG Speaker Series: Call for Nominations Message-ID: <37AEE009-21C9-436A-84D6-9C50788A89E7@ucdavis.edu> 2020 January 6 Dear Community, We are pleased to announce that nominations for speakers for the 2020-2021 CIG Speakers Series are now open. The CIG Speakers Series seeks to promote computational modeling in geodynamics and related earth science disciplines. Speakers are drawn from a diverse pool of experts with exceptional capability to communicate the power of computation for understanding the dynamic forces that shape the surface and operate in the interior of our planet. Lectures are aimed at a broad scientific audience suitable for departmental or university colloquia series, and similar venues. Many thanks to our 2019-2020 speakers - Sylvain Barbot, Sarah Stamps, and Jolante van Wijk for taking time out of their busy schedules to share their expertise with diverse audiences and to talk with students in a classroom setting. These visits have been very well received by the host institutions. We look forward to continuing next year with another group of excellent CIG speakers! Nominations Know a speaker that can give a compelling and accessible talk on CIG related science? Submit your nominations by February 28, 2020. Host Institutions For full consideration for hosting a CIG Speaker, please apply before May 1, 2020. Apply and Inquiries: speakers at geodynamics.org For more information, see our website: https://geodynamics.org/cig/events/speaker-series/ Best, -Lorraine ***************************** Lorraine Hwang, Ph.D. - Director Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics 530.752.3656 geodynamics.org Best, -Lorraine ***************************** Lorraine Hwang, Ph.D. - Director Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics 530.752.3656 geodynamics.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daniel.bower at csh.unibe.ch Tue Jan 7 02:42:11 2020 From: daniel.bower at csh.unibe.ch (Dan Bower) Date: Tue, 7 Jan 2020 11:42:11 +0100 Subject: [CIG-ALL] EGU 2020 Session: Melts and fluids at Extreme Conditions Message-ID: EGU 2020 SESSION: MELTS AND FLUIDS AT EXTREME CONDITIONS Abstract submission is open for EGU 2020, held in Vienna from May 3-8. The deadline for the abstract submission is January 15, 2020, 13:00 CET. The objective of this session is to bring together researchers interested in understanding fluids and melts at ultra high temperatures and/or ultra high pressures. We encourage contributions that address the thermodynamics, dynamics and chemistry of fluids and melts relevant to planetary accretion, differentiation and evolution. Abstracts that cross disciplines or involve multiple methodologies (experiments, calculations, etc.) are especially encouraged. Convenors: Antonio Manjon-Cabeza Cordoba (ETHZ), Dan J. Bower (Uni Bern), Natalia Solomatova (ENS Lyon) To submit to this session, use the link below: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2020/session/36529 -- Dan J. Bower, PhD Senior Research Associate (Oberassistent) SNSF Ambizione Fellow and CSH Fellow Center for Space and Habitability (CSH) University of Bern Gesellschaftsstrasse 6 3012 Bern, Switzerland +41 31 631 3703 daniel.bower at csh.unibe.ch https://danjbower.wordpress.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From p.koelemeijer at es.rhul.ac.uk Wed Jan 8 09:51:46 2020 From: p.koelemeijer at es.rhul.ac.uk (Paula Koelemeijer) Date: Wed, 8 Jan 2020 17:51:46 +0000 Subject: [CIG-ALL] 3D printing and AR: EGU2020 session EOS4.3 and special journal issue Message-ID: <4de25134-1608-6b5c-3cd6-2f3a682f4974@es.rhul.ac.uk> Dear colleagues, If you are interested in 3D printing / AR / VR, whether this is for research purposes, outreach or teaching, please read on! _*1) EGU session *_ Please consider submitting an abstract to our session EOS4.3 at the EGU General Assembly in Vienna (3-8th May 2020): /*EOS4.3: 3D toys in Earth Science: 3D-printing, AR (Augmented Reality) and VR (Virtual Reality) for outreach and pedagogy*/ // /**/ // 3D representation technology is a fast developing field, made possible by progress in computing and reflected by the gaming and video industries. Notably, 3D-printing provides a cost-effective and tactile way to illustrate research concepts, while Augmented Reality (AR) or Virtual Reality (VR) allow to grasp complex processes and geometries using common smartphones or handheld devices. Using these technologies, 3-dimensional objects and datasets are developed that are well suited for outreach, teaching and wider public engagement. The design of 3D models of the Earth on different scales based on photogrammetry, mapping and imagery, modelling and inverse modelling is a challenging task. Before 3D data sets (physically real or virtual) can be explored in outreach activities or teaching settings, several steps have to be taken which all come with their own issues: how to export data into the objects formats used in the 3D engineering community; how to feed objects into software to allow 3D-printing; how to manipulate virtual objects easily using handheld devices. We welcome contributions that are focused on technical aspects of real or virtual realisations, as well as their use in pedagogy, outreach or public communication of Earth Sciences research topics. Submit your abstracts here before the abstract deadline of 15th January 2020 (13:00 CET): https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2020/session/34772 Note that submitting to EOS programme sessions does not count towards the one-regular-abstract-rule; you can thus still also submit an abstract to other programme group sessions. Please get in touch with us if you have any questions related to the session. _*2) Special journal issue *_ * * A special research topic on 3D printing in geology and geophysics is now open for submission in Frontiers in Earth Sciences (Solid Earth Geophysics, Structural Geology & Tectonics, Volcanology): /*3D Printing in Geology and Geophysics: A New World of Opportunities in Research, Outreach, and Education*/ We invite anyone who is using 3D printing methodologies for research, teaching and / or outreach to have a look at the Research Topic page: https://www.frontiersin.org/research-topics/12366/3d-printing-in-geology-and-geophysics-a-new-world-of-opportunities-in-research-outreach-and-educatio The aim is for the journal issue to be accompanied by a database with 3D printable models, that can be readily accessed and used for outreach and education. Please get in touch if you have any questions related to the special issue. Best wishes, Paula Koelemeijer -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From matthew.w.herman at gmail.com Wed Jan 8 05:21:24 2020 From: matthew.w.herman at gmail.com (Matthew Herman) Date: Wed, 8 Jan 2020 14:21:24 +0100 Subject: [CIG-ALL] Reminder: EGU2020 Session: Earthquake sequences and (a)seismic slip across scales Message-ID: Hi Colleagues, In keeping with the spirit of the season, we would like to remind you about our session at EGU 2020 on plate boundary earthquake cycle processes. If you work on observing, analyzing, or modeling plate boundaries to better constrain the underlying geological and geodynamic processes or seismic hazards, then this is the session for you! A detailed description is provided below. Dr. Sylvain Barbot from USC will be our invited speaker. You can submit your abstract by clicking on “Abstract submission” at this link: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2020/session/36280 Reminder: The deadline for abstract submission is *15 January 2020 *(one week from today). We look forward to seeing you in Vienna! Your Friendly Conveners, Matt Herman, Ylona van Dinther, Marcos Moreno, and Luca Dal Zilio ---------- *TS5.2. Advances in understanding earthquake sequences and (a)seismic slip across scales* *The largest earthquakes globally occur along plate boundaries, producing intense shaking and associated secondary hazards over broad regions. In the past few years, there have been significant improvements in the quantity and quality of geodetic, seismological, and geological observations of the slow accumulation and rapid release of strain at these plate boundaries. At the same time, improvements in modeling techniques are providing new insights into the geodynamic processes controlling the occurrence of major earthquakes. With these advances, it is now becoming possible to address outstanding issues about both seismic and aseismic deformation at plate boundaries, such as time-variable locking and unlocking of the plate interface, the extent and role of slow slip events, the links between earthquake cycles and permanent deformation, and the behavior of complete cycles revealed by paleo-seismic and paleo-geodetic observations.* *We invite contributions that investigate the spectrum of deformation occurring throughout the earthquake cycle at plate boundaries, from aseismic to seismic and across a variety of spatial and temporal scales. Submissions that utilize improved remote and field observational capabilities, developments in data analysis, or innovations in analog and numerical modeling to advance the understanding of the underlying physical processes are encouraged.* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dalzilio.luca at gmail.com Fri Jan 10 01:36:59 2020 From: dalzilio.luca at gmail.com (Luca Dal Zilio) Date: Fri, 10 Jan 2020 10:36:59 +0100 Subject: [CIG-ALL] Call for abstracts EGU 2020 Session TS5.4/GS9.4/SM2.9: "Seismic and Aseismic Slip on Seismogenic Faults" Message-ID: <7A93DB6C-F344-4671-9741-985BF0302567@gmail.com> Dear colleagues, We’d like to draw your attention to our interdisciplinary EGU session (co-sponsored by AGU), which seeks to deepen our understanding of the variety of slip behaviours through a diverse set of topics and methodologies. We hope you will consider submitting an abstract! Please feel free to share this with anyone else who might be interested. Deadline for submission: January 15, 2020 Session TS5.4/GS9.4/SM2.9: Seismic and Aseismic Slip on Seismogenic Faults Invited speakers: Chris Marone (Penn State & Sapienza University of Rome): "Fault healing plays a key role in creating the spectrum of tectonic faulting styles from seismic to aseismic slip" Adriano Gualandi (Caltech): "Towards Slow Earthquakes Forecasting" Tectonic faults accommodate plate motion through various styles of seismic and aseismic slip spanning a wide range of spatiotemporal scales. Understanding the mechanics and interplay between seismic rupture and aseismic slip is central to seismotectonics as it determines the seismic potential of faults. In particular, unraveling the underlying physics controlling these styles of deformation bears a great deal in earthquakes hazards mitigation especially in highly urbanized regions. In partnership with the AGU Tectonophysics section, we invite contributions from observational, experimental, geological and theoretical studies that explore the diversity and interplay among seismic and aseismic slip phenomena in various tectonic settings, including the following questions: (1) How does the nature of creeping faults change with the style of faulting, loading rate, and other factors? (2) Are different slip behaviors well separated in space, or can the same fault areas experience different failure modes? (3) Is there a systematic spatial or temporal relation between different types of slip? link: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2020/session/36283 Kind regards, Jorge Jara, Ecole Normale Supérieure Luca Dal Zilio, Caltech Allie Hutchison, Géoazur Valére Lambert, Caltech Sylvain Michel, Ecole Normale Supérieure -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rfischer at geomar.de Mon Jan 13 03:21:56 2020 From: rfischer at geomar.de (Ria Fischer) Date: Mon, 13 Jan 2020 12:21:56 +0100 Subject: [CIG-ALL] EGU 2020 - Early Earth: Dynamics, Geology, Chemistry and Life in the Archean Earth Message-ID: <5b341ce5-181c-fae0-ff0d-749f05f74b58@geomar.de> Dear colleagues, abstract submission deadline for EGU 2020 in Vienna is fast approaching. We would like to draw your attention to our multidisciplinary EGU session *Early Earth: Dynamics, Geology, Chemistry and Life in the Archean Earth (GD1.1/AS4/CL1/GMPV3/TS14) *  and hope to see you at the EGU General Assembly (3.-8. May 2020). Please note that the *deadline for abstract submission* is *15. January 2020**, 13:00 CET.** **** ***We look forward to seeing you in Vienna. Kind regards, Ria Fischer Peter A. Cawood Nicholas Gardiner Antoine Rozel Jeroen van Hunen *Session GD1.1/**AS4/CL1/GMPV3/TS14 **"Early Earth: Dynamics, Geology, Chemistry and Life in the Archean Earth"** *Processes responsible for formation and development of the early Earth (> 2500Ma) are not well understood and strongly debated, reflecting in part the poorly preserved, altered, and incomplete nature of the geological record from this time. In this session we encourage the presentation of new approaches and models for the development of Earth's early crust and mantle and their methods of interaction. We encourage contributions from the study of the preserved rock archive as well as geodynamic models of crustal and mantle dynamics so as to better understand the genesis and evolution of continental crust and the stabilization of cratons. We invite abstracts from a large range of disciplines including geodynamics, geology, geochemistry, and petrology but also studies of early atmosphere, biosphere and early life relevant to this period of Earth history. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From walid.benmansour at mq.edu.au Mon Jan 13 00:17:36 2020 From: walid.benmansour at mq.edu.au (Walid Ben Mansour) Date: Mon, 13 Jan 2020 08:17:36 +0000 Subject: [CIG-ALL] Final calling for abstracts EGU 2020 (deadline 15/01/2020) Message-ID: Dear colleagues, We would like to draw your attention to the session GD2.3- Thermochemical imaging of the mantle: from observables to modelling at the EGU General Assembly 2020 in Vienna and hope that you will consider submitting an abstract to this session. The abstract submission deadline is 15 Jan 2020. Session description: The thermochemical structure of Earth mantle is key information to better understand its dynamics and its evolution in time. In the last 20 years, several approaches were suggested from seismological observations, experimental geophysics, and computational geochemistry to improve our understanding of the thermochemical structure beneath cratonic areas, subduction zones or mantle upwellings. The development of high-performance computational infrastructures (HPCI) and new algorithms to manage the processing of big data brings new opportunities to produce high-resolution images and a better understanding of mantle dynamics. This session wishes to bring together contributions from experimental geophysics and computational geochemistry to large scale geodynamics, which is aimed at imaging and modelling thermochemical structure on different time scales. Presentations of new methods combining multiple observations of geophysical and geochemical datasets with regional to global geophysical modelling are particularly encouraged.” Solicited speaker: Saskia Goes (Imperial College, London) With best regards Walid Ben Mansour (Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia) Laura Cobden (Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands) Bernhard Steinberger (GFZ Postdam, Postdam, Germany) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ljhwang at ucdavis.edu Mon Jan 20 16:22:44 2020 From: ljhwang at ucdavis.edu (Lorraine Hwang) Date: Mon, 20 Jan 2020 16:22:44 -0800 Subject: [CIG-ALL] 2020 CGU CIG Mantle and Lithosphere Dynamics Workshop - Abstracts and travel support Message-ID: <8170F8E0-4635-4DCC-99F5-7594B70391E9@ucdavis.edu> 20 January 2020 Dear CIG Community, We are please to announce that abstracts are now being accepted for the 2020 CGU CIG Mantle and Lithosphere Dynamics Workshop. This workshop is the third joint meeting with the Canadian Geophysical Union (CGU) intended to bring together researchers who study the dynamics of the Earth’s mantle and lithosphere through numerical modeling. The meeting will focus on numerical modeling, mantle dynamics, and the geodynamics of lithospheric evolution and will combine invited and contributed talks and poster sessions. The Meeting will take place May 3-6, 2020, in Banff, Alberta. The theme of this year's meeting, which reflects a range of scientific interests, is "Addressing Challenges in Earth and Environmental Sciences”: https://meeting2020.cgu-ugc.ca/ Information on the meeting, including the session descriptions and current workshop themes can now be found at: https://meeting2020.cgu-ugc.ca/program/2020-meeting-sessions/ Abstract submissions will be accepted up to February 25, 2020. Limited support is available for US based participants. See: https://geodynamics.org/cig/events/calendar/2018-cgu-cig-2/?eID=1543 We look forward to seeing you in Banff this May! Sincerely, Jeffrey McKenzie CGU Secretary and -Lorraine Hwang ***************************** Lorraine Hwang, Ph.D. - Director Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics geodynamics.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ljhwang at ucdavis.edu Fri Jan 24 09:05:16 2020 From: ljhwang at ucdavis.edu (Lorraine Hwang) Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2020 09:05:16 -0800 Subject: [CIG-ALL] Introduction to PETSc February 6 and HPC on Frontera February 13, 20, 27 Message-ID: <3B5F01E6-C170-463C-B7E3-614157E91775@ucdavis.edu> We are pleased to announce the upcoming short courses being offered this February. Introduction to PETSc Training February 6th, 2020 9:00 am to 4:00 pm CT The Portable Extensible Toolkit for Scientific Computing (PETSc) provides a framework for the development of computational science codes. Its focus is on solving linear and nonlinear systems, but it is more than a collection of algorithms: it is a complete toolkit supporting parallel data structures, linear algebra, PDEs, meshes. PETSc is designed for scalable parallelism and contains debugging and profiling support. This course will discuss the basic PETSc objects and how they make up a PETSc code. Upon completion of this course, you should be able to independently develop scalable scientific simulation codes with the PETSc library. This training will be available to both in-person and remote attendees via webcast. Local participants are strongly encouraged to attend in-person. Registration for this event closes at 5:00 pm CT on February 4th, 2020. To register and for more information please visit: https://learn.tacc.utexas.edu/ High Performance Computing on Frontera February 13th, 2020 - 8:30 am to 4:00 pm CT February 20th and 27th, 2020 - 9:00 am to 4:00 pm CT TACC is offering this training on High Performance Computing (HPC) and parallel programming for Frontera and other TACC resources (Stampede2) on three separate days. During the first day (2/13) we focus on parallel programming with OpenMP. We provide an introduction to OpenMP in the morning and delve into advanced topics (tasking, SIMD, thread pinning) in the afternoon. On the second day (2/20) the focus shifts to MPI, again covering an introduction and some intermediate topics. We also discuss hybrid computing and the interplay between OpenMP and MPI within a single code. The day ends with a session on debugging and profiling. On the third day (2/27) we cover advanced MPI topics including performance optimizations and best practices on Frontera. We also discuss parallel I/O. Most of the training segments have a hands-on component (lab) that will be conducted on Frontera (or Stampede2). This training is available to both in-person and remote attendees via webcast. Local participants are strongly encouraged to attend in-person. Registration for each day closes 2 days before at 5:00 pm CT. To register for each day of the event and for more information, please visit: https://learn.tacc.utexas.edu/ Please email jasona at tacc.utexas.edu if you have any questions. Best regards, Jason Allison - TACC User Services and Training Coordination -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From walid.benmansour at mq.edu.au Fri Jan 24 19:10:31 2020 From: walid.benmansour at mq.edu.au (Walid Ben Mansour) Date: Sat, 25 Jan 2020 03:10:31 +0000 Subject: [CIG-ALL] First call for abstracts JpGU-AGU joint meeting 2020 Message-ID: <3B8F5A95-BDC5-46C9-8868-F1256F6EAF1E@mq.edu.au> Dear Colleagues, We would like to draw your attention to the session S-IT28: Mantle dynamic from thermochemical imaging from observable to numerical imaging at the JpGU-AGU joint meeting 2020 and hope that you will consider submitting an abstract to this session. Session description: The thermochemical structure of Earth mantle is key information to better understand its dynamics and its evolution in time. In the last 20 years, several approaches were suggested from seismological observations, experimental geophysics, and computational geochemistry to improve our understanding of the thermochemical structure beneath cratonic areas, subduction zones or mantle upwellings. The development of high-performance computational infrastructures (HPCI) and new algorithms to manage the processing of big data brings new opportunities to produce high-resolution images and a better understanding of mantle dynamics. This session wishes to bring together contributions from experimental geophysics and computational geochemistry to large scale geodynamics, which is aimed at imaging and modelling thermochemical structure on different time scales. Presentations of new methods combining multiple observations of geophysical and geochemical datasets with regional to global geophysical modelling are particularly encouraged.” Abstract Submission is now open on the meeting website: http://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2020/ The deadline is 5:00 PM Japan Standard Time (UTC+9) on February 18, 2020. All AGU members are eligible to receive a member registration rates. To attend the meeting, you must register your AGU account with JpGU through creating JpGU ID. For detail, please visit the website: http://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2020/membership.php#membership_menu02_h2_04 Conveners: Walid Ben Mansour (Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia) Yosuke Aoki (University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ljhwang at ucdavis.edu Mon Jan 27 09:37:08 2020 From: ljhwang at ucdavis.edu (Lorraine Hwang) Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2020 09:37:08 -0800 Subject: [CIG-ALL] 4th Annual TACC Institute Series Message-ID: <78772CB0-15E3-4523-9B2F-15DB887CCA3A@ucdavis.edu> We are pleased to announce the 4th Annual TACC Institute Series! The Institutes offer attendees intense, immersive training in advanced computation, with topics including machine learning, developing parallel applications for modern high performance computers, visualizing and analyzing large data sets, and much more. Registration will open soon, and we will send additional announcements as the registration opportunities open. You can browse all of the offerings here https://www.tacc.utexas.edu/education/institutes . This year we are offering the following institutes: Introduction to Advanced Computing (online webinar) May 5-6, 2020 Advanced Computing Essentials June 9-11, 2020 Computational Research Techniques July 7-10, 2020 Applied Parallel Programming Reproducible Science Scientific Visualization Machine Learning August 10-14, 2020 HPC Leadership TBD Designing and Administering Large Scale Systems TBD If you have any questions, please contact us at info at tacc.utexas.edu . We look forward to hosting you in Austin! Regards, Charlie Charlie Dey Director, Training and Professional Development -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: