From 605e2e3f3c4f2513a8f1f6b24d6a12651641085a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: jstathas <73258418+jstathas@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 10 Nov 2023 13:25:36 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] Update HTC23_David_Swanson_Awardees Changed died suddenly to passed away unexpectedly --- HTC23_David_Swanson_Awardees | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/HTC23_David_Swanson_Awardees b/HTC23_David_Swanson_Awardees index 90b419c..2a381a8 100644 --- a/HTC23_David_Swanson_Awardees +++ b/HTC23_David_Swanson_Awardees @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ excerpt: Jimena González Lozano and Aashish Tripathee are 2023’s recipients o --- -OSG leadership created the [OSG David Swanson Award](https://osg-htc.org/outreach/swanson-award/) in memoriam of Swanson, who championed throughout his life for both the success of his students and the expansion of OSG and research computing. David Swanson, who died suddenly in 2019, was a computer science and engineering research professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. The award reflects Swanson’s and [OSG School’s](https://osg-htc.org/user-school-2023/) emphasis on helping people develop their skills in technology and advancing science with large-scale computing, OSG research facilitation lead Christina Koch says. Researchers — like [Jimena González Lozano](https://www.physics.wisc.edu/directory/gonzalez-lozano-jimena/) and [Aashish Tripathee](https://lsa.umich.edu/physics/people/research-fellows/aashisht.html) who sought the OSG School’s high-throughput computing (HTC) resources to solve complex computational challenges, and in turn, were able to evolve their research projects — have been honored with the award since its establishment in 2019. González is a Department of Physics observational cosmology Ph.D. student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Tripathee is a University of Michigan Physics post-doctoral research fellow. +OSG leadership created the [OSG David Swanson Award](https://osg-htc.org/outreach/swanson-award/) in memoriam of Swanson, who championed throughout his life for both the success of his students and the expansion of OSG and research computing. David Swanson, who passed away unexpectedly in 2019, was a computer science and engineering research professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. The award reflects Swanson’s and [OSG School’s](https://osg-htc.org/user-school-2023/) emphasis on helping people develop their skills in technology and advancing science with large-scale computing, OSG research facilitation lead Christina Koch says. Researchers — like [Jimena González Lozano](https://www.physics.wisc.edu/directory/gonzalez-lozano-jimena/) and [Aashish Tripathee](https://lsa.umich.edu/physics/people/research-fellows/aashisht.html) who sought the OSG School’s high-throughput computing (HTC) resources to solve complex computational challenges, and in turn, were able to evolve their research projects — have been honored with the award since its establishment in 2019. González is a Department of Physics observational cosmology Ph.D. student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Tripathee is a University of Michigan Physics post-doctoral research fellow. Awardees are provided the opportunity to share their research at the OSG All-Hands Meeting, which is part of the annual [2023 Throughput Computing (HTC23) conference](https://agenda.hep.wisc.edu/event/2014/contributions/), held in Madison, Wisconsin. “To have it in the context of recognizing a wonderful person like David is really meaningful. It’s like ‘Oh yes, this is why we’re doing what we’re doing,’ and it’s rewarding,” Koch reflects.