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DOE announces Genesis Mission request for applications
Ian Buck, Nvidia’s vice president of hyperscale and HPC computing (left), and Darío Gil, DOE Under Secretary for Science and Genesis Mission lead, at the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference. (Photo: Nvidia)
Department of Energy Under Secretary for Science and Genesis Mission lead Darío Gil participated in a session at the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference on March 17 that coincided with the announcement of the DOE’s $293 million Genesis Mission request for applications, which invites interdisciplinary teams to submit ideas for projects addressing over 20 of Genesis’s stated national challenges, several of which focus on accelerating nuclear research and nuclear energy output.
“We seek breakthrough ideas and novel collaborations leveraging the scientific prowess of our national laboratories, the private sector, universities, and science philanthropies,” said Gil.
D. B. MacMillan
Nuclear Science and Engineering | Volume 48 | Number 2 | June 1972 | Page 219
Technical Note | doi.org/10.13182/NSE72-A22473
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
Let α be a parameter governing a Monte Carlo importance sampling process. This note gives formulas by which the results of a Monte Carlo run may be used to estimate the derivatives of the variance with respect to α. It is pointed out that these derivatives may be used to optimize α, that is, to minimize the variance of the Monte Carlo problem.