INDUSTRY
Los Alamos National Laboratory to host Supercomputing Challenge April 24 - 25
More than 200 New Mexico middle- and high-school students will be at Los Alamos National Laboratory next Monday and Tuesday (April 24-25) for judging and awards in the 16th annual New Mexico Supercomputing Challenge. The goal of the year-long event is to increase knowledge of science and computing; expose students and teachers to computers and applied mathematics; and instill enthusiasm for science in middle- and high-school students, their families and communities. Any New Mexico high school or middle school student is eligible to enter the Supercomputing Challenge.
Laboratory personnel can visit the J. Robert Oppenheimer Study Center at Technical Area 3 on Monday afternoon to view posters that describe the students' computational science projects. "This event is a great opportunity to show off the talents of New Mexico's students and to show off to the students, some of the research we do here at the Laboratory," said David Kratzer of Los Alamos' High Performance Computing Systems group, Laboratory coordinator of the Supercomputing Challenge.
Also on Monday, participating students will present their projects and take part in tours, talks and demonstrations with Laboratory technical staff members.
Student projects will be recognized during an awards ceremony from 9 to 11 a.m., on Tuesday in the Church of Christ Auditorium, 2323 Diamond Drive, 1.6 miles north of the Laboratory.
The Supercomputing Challenge was conceived in 1990 by former Laboratory Director Sig Hecker and Tom Thornhill, then president of New Mexico Technet Inc., a nonprofit company that in 1985 set up a computer network to link the state's national laboratories, universities, state government and some private companies. Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., and John Rollwagen, then chairman and chief executive officer of Cray Research Inc., added their support.
More information on the Supercomputing Challenge, including a list of student projects, can be found online.