By Mariah Rosales, CARC administrative coordinatorMarch 14, 2023
The UNM Center for Advanced Research Computing (CARC) hosts its second annual User Meeting on Friday, April 14, at the SUB Santa Ana A & B. Registration is required and open now.
CARC held its first User Meeting in April 2022 with the goal of providing...
University of New Mexico Research assistant professor Matthew Fricke recruited a group of six undergraduate students interested in learning how to build supercomputers with the intention of taking part in two supercomputing competitions in 2023. Fricke...
University of New Mexico junior Eric Olaguir recently won an award for his poster presentation at the Transportation Research Board’s (TRB’s) 2023 Annual Meeting. Olaguir is a student in Civil Engineering assistant professor Fernando Moreu’s Smart...
By Mariah Rosales, CARC Administrative CoordinatorFebruary 16, 2023
A revised version of an exhibition created in 2022 by the Santa Fe Art Institute (SFAI) teamed up with SciArt Santa Fe, STEAM NM at The University of New Mexico Center for Advance Research Computing (CARC), and the UNM College of Fine Arts is now on...
University of New Mexico Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology Hua Guo and his research team have logged an impressive 7,257 compute years on UNM Center for Advanced Research Computing (CARC) systems in the past four years. In other...
The University of New Mexico Center for Advanced Research Computing (CARC) has launched a new condo cluster. The cluster, named Hopper, will provide general compute resources to the UNM community and also includes hardware funded by individual UNM researchers to meet support...
Eric Lindsey, assistant professor in the Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences at The University of New Mexico, has concerns about the sustainability of aquifers around the world. Aquifers, nature’s underground water storage spaces, are vital to human...
Researchers all over the world are pursuing methods to develop clean, green, and renewable energy resources to reduce human impact on the planet. This includes research dedicated to building new, technologically advanced, nuclear reactors to support the...
The University of New Mexico’s Smart Management of Infrastructure Laboratory (SMILab) has created a remote-controlled (RC) robot designed to detect potential rockslide danger. The robot, affectionately nicknamed “Brutus,” pinpoints damaged and unstable...
Guillermo Terrén-Serrano, Ph.D. candidate in the Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) Department of The University of New Mexico (UNM), has designed a new way for solar forecasters to predict future cloud cover.