Larry Smarr
Larry Lee Smarr is a physicist and leader in scientific computing, supercomputer applications, and Internet infrastructure from Missouri. He currently works at the University of California, San Diego. Smarr has been among the most important synthesizers and conductors of innovation, discovery, and commercialization of new technologies – including areas as disparate as the Web browser and personalized medicine. In his career, Smarr has made pioneering breakthroughs in research on black holes, spearheaded the use of supercomputers for academic research, and presided over some of the major innovations that created the modern Internet. For nearly 20 years, he has been building a new model for academic research based on interdisciplinary collaboration.
Larry Smarr | |
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Larry Smarr viewing an ImmersaDesk | |
Born | Larry Lee Smarr October 16, 1948 |
Education | University of Missouri (BA, MS) University of Texas at Austin (PhD) |
Known for | Quantified Self Metacomputing |
Awards | Member of the National Academy of Engineering Fellow of the American Physical Society Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Delmer S. Fahrney Medal (1990) Golden Goose Award (2014) |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Princeton University Yale University Harvard University University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign University of California, San Diego. |
Thesis | The Structure of General Relativity with a Numerical Illustration: The Collision of Two Black Holes (1975) |
Website | lsmarr |