Students from across the country attended Argonne’s eight-part series to learn the fundamentals of using AI and supercomputers for scientific research.
Following a free, advance screening of the movie in downtown Chicago, leading experts in quantum science discussed the quantum realm in Marvel’s universe and in ours.
Argonne’s Rapid Prototyping Laboratory is helping undergraduate and graduate students prepare for future science careers. Their efforts are paving the way for automating lab work with robotics and AI in autonomous discovery.
The future of nuclear energy, which can produce electricity without harmful emissions, depends on discovery of new materials. A scientist at Argonne is using computer vision to separate the best candidates from a crowded field.
Through a partnership with the National GEM Consortium to support graduate studies for students from underrepresented groups, Argonne helps students gain skills in artificial intelligence.
After a successful start, the Data4All bridge workshop series co-developed by Argonne and the University of Chicago has received funding for two more years of programming.