News
POP and ChEESE work together to improve Probabilistic Volcanic Hazard Assessment pilot demonstrator
09 November 2020

The Center of Excellence in Performance Optimisation and Productivity (POP) has recently worked with ChEESE in order to improve the FALL3D code and the workflow developed in the project´s Pilot Demonstrator 6 - Probabilistic Volcanic Hazard Assessment (PVHA), that analyses several thousands of FALL3D simulations. The resulting Probabilistic Volcanic Hazard Assessment Work Flow package (PVHA_WF) has allowed FALL3D to achieve 588x and 488x execution time speedups. 

Read more on the POP website: https://pop-coe.eu/blog/588x-and-488x-execution-time-speedups-of-a-volcanic-hazard-assessment-code

News
Women in HPC: Beatriz Martinez Montesinos
02 November 2020

ChEESE proudly announces that two female researchers will present their work in the lightning talk session of the Women in HPC Workshop at SC20 on 11 November 2020. Get to know them! In these interviews Marisol Monterrubio-Velasco and Beatriz Martinez Montesinos introduce themselves and their work and share what being a woman in HPC means for them.

Beatriz Martinez Montesinos

Volcanic Hazard Assessment Technologist at the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV)


What is your motivation for pursuing your research?

I was never interested in computers. I liked mathematics, physics, Earth sciences, etc. Due to life circumstances, I worked for many years as a computer programmer in the information technology sector as a way of making a living and because I was not bad at it. When I decided to change my career path, I looked for a way to combine both my passion and my experience and I discovered that informatics is fundamental in all areas of research. In particular, applying computing in the field of volcanology is not only fascinating but necessary for our safety, which is a great motivation for me. 

What would you have done if you were not a researcher? 

Before starting in the computer world, during my studies, I sewed clothes, bags and things like that. It is a hobby that I have always had and perhaps it could have become a profession. 

Have you encountered any challenges as a woman in pursuing your research career? 

As a mother, the great challenge is to start from scratch every time I change country to join a new project, with all that that entails: looking for a house, for schools and adapting ourselves to new situations. But I am lucky that my children love to visit new countries and learn new languages, so each change appears as a new adventure for us. My daily challenge is to reconcile work and family life, that is why I always have a process running in parallel in my brain trying to arrange my day to day. On the other hand, this dedication generally does not require a rigid schedule and workplace, so it helps me get organised. 

What do you do within the ChEESE project? 

I am part on the team that is developing the pilot demonstrator number 6 (PD6) in the field of the Physical Volcanology. From the history of the volcano, probabilistic studies and monitoring data, we are using HPC to update current tools for the Probabilistic Volcanic Hazard Assessment in terms of ash dispersal and we are applying it to Campi Flegrei in Italy and Jan Mayen in Norway. 

How do you like it so far? 

The ChEESE project is amazing, loads of experts from different disciplines working hand-in-hand to solve important computational challenges in Earth Sciences. I am happy to be part of it. 

Do you have any advice for young researchers who would like to follow in your footsteps? 

I would advise them not to set limits, either personally or professionally, and that regardless of the discipline in which they operate, consider HPC as a powerful tool to advance their research. 

What does being a woman in HPC mean to you? 

There are few women in HPC. Much remains to be done until all women have the same rights, freedoms and opportunities as men. As we achieve that, more women will study, more women will  be researchers and more women will be interested in HPC. In my work I do not have the consciousness of being a woman, I am simply one more person on the team. 

Watch the presentation here

News
Women in HPC: Marisol Monterrubio-Velasco
02 November 2020

ChEESE proudly announces that two female researchers will present their work in the lightning talk session of the Women in HPC Workshop at SC20 on 11 November 2020. Get to know them! In these interviews Marisol Monterrubio-Velasco and Beatriz Martinez Montesinos introduce themselves and their work and share what being a woman in HPC means for them.

 

Marisol Monterrubio-Velasco

Postdoctoral researcher at the Barcelona Supercomputing Center

 

What is your motivation for pursuing your research?

I love the creativity involved in research. In my area, I study earthquake behavior, so for me it is a great pleasure to try to understand why this natural phenomenon occurs. Moreover, my research area has a direct impact on society so I feel that it is useful for the general community.

What would you have done if you were not a researcher?

Maybe a high performance athlete.

Have you encountered any challenges as a woman in pursuing your research career?

Yes, a little bit. This work is highly competitive, so as a woman who has decided to be a mother, I find that you need to not just run but fly to reach the level that allows you to find opportunities in the research world.

What do you do within the ChEESE project?

I work on the Urgent Seismic Simulations pilot demonstrator. My team and I are developing a workflow that allows rapid earthquake simulations and analysis of their implications.

How do you like it so far?

For me it is an exciting topic because it is useful research and it pushes you to continue innovating and finding new ways to solve the issues inherent to this topic

Do you have any advice for young researchers who would like to follow in your footsteps?

Yes, in the research world you must persevere and find passion in what you do to really enjoy it. Sometimes you run into difficulties of many kinds such as frustration because you can´t always find the answer at first try. However, the end, if you are persistent and insistent with an open mind to adopt new ideas then your roads open up and you can start progressing. 

What does being a woman in HPC mean to you?

For me it is a great challenge and an opportunity to learn every day. It is also an opportunity to show other young women that this is not a man's career, it's just a job that women and men can do regardless of gender.

 

Watch the presentation here