Awards


At the international SC17 conference, a High Performance Computing for Manufacturing (HPC4Mfg) project aimed at improving the operational efficiency of paper manufacturers earned an HPC Innovation Excellence Award. The project, led by Livermore researcher Will Elmer, was a collaboration with consumer goods manufacturer Procter & Gamble and required the development of a parallel program called p-fiber. The program is capable of quickly preparing the fiber geometry and meshing input needed to model thousands of paper fibers at once. As part of the HPC4Mfg effort, Elmer and team generated up to 20 million finite elements and modeled the most paper fibers in a simulation to date. At SC17, HPC Innovation Excellence awards were presented for only 10 projects out of more than 110 submissions. The award recognizes outstanding achievements enabled through HPC.


Charles Orth, a Lawrence Livermore physicist for more than 40 years, was presented with the 2017 Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award by the publication Marquis Who’s Who, a directory of short biographies of notable figures. The publication bestows the award on a biographee who has demonstrated “leadership, excellence, and longevity within their industry and profession.” Orth has been involved in a broad range of research, including the negative search for quarks, high-altitude cosmic-ray spectrometry, Monte Carlo nuclear electromagnetic cascade calculations, and real-time corrected telescope images, as well as extensive work in the National Ignition Facility. Orth also was directly involved with the joint Livermore–NASA project to conceptualize the VISTA spacecraft, a rocket design that could be powered by inertial confinement fusion.