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Minisymposium Presentation

Recent Advances in Interoperable Workflows for Complex System

Monday, June 3, 2024
15:00
-
15:30
CEST
Climate, Weather and Earth Sciences
Climate, Weather and Earth Sciences
Climate, Weather and Earth Sciences
Chemistry and Materials
Chemistry and Materials
Chemistry and Materials
Computer Science and Applied Mathematics
Computer Science and Applied Mathematics
Computer Science and Applied Mathematics
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humanities and Social Sciences
Engineering
Engineering
Engineering
Life Sciences
Life Sciences
Life Sciences
Physics
Physics
Physics

Presenter

Rafael
Ferreira da Silva
-
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Rafael Ferreira da Silva is a Senior Research Scientist at National Center for Computational Sciences (NCCS) in the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). Dr. Ferreira da Silva's research focuses on the efficient and resilient execution of large-scale scientific workflow applications on heterogeneous distributed systems, and the modeling and simulation of parallel and distributed computing systems. He has extensive experience leading/working on large-scale projects related to distributed computing platforms, cyberinfrastructure systems, and applications. He also brings substantial experience on community engagement and workshop organization. For more information, please visit https://rafaelsilva.com.

Description

This presentation delves into cutting-edge developments in the creation of interoperable workflows that bridge the gap between experimental instruments and diverse computational platforms, highlighting the push towards an integrated research ecosystem with a focus on seamlessly integrating experiments with sophisticated modeling and simulations across the edge-to-cloud-HPC continuum. These workflows, spanning various scientific domains, require the intricate melding of AI/ML, computational modeling, and complex multi-domain simulations. This presentation will showcase recent initiatives to enable the integration of distributed and diverse scientific systems, underscoring the necessity of establishing a common, interoperable ecosystem to support both current and future scientific workflows.

Authors