Lois Virginia Curfman McInnes is an American applied mathematician who works as a senior computational scientist at Argonne National Laboratory, where she works on the numerical solution of nonlinear partial differential equations for scientific applications.[1]
Education and career
editMcInnes graduated in 1988 from Muhlenberg College, with a double major in mathematics and physics.[1] She completed her doctorate in applied mathematics in 1993 at the University of Virginia; her dissertation, Solution of Convective-Diffusive Flow Problems with Newton-Like Methods, was supervised by James McDonough Ortega.[1][2] She was chair of the SIAM Activity Group on Computational Science and Engineering for 2015–2016.[1] In 2021, she will join the SIAM council as a Member-at-Large. In 2022, she was elected Chair of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics Activity Group on Supercomputing (SIAM SIAG/SC).[3]
Recognition
editShe won the Ernest Orlando Lawrence Award of the DOE Office of Science in 2011.[4] She and her co-developers of the Portable, Extensible Toolkit for Scientific Computation were also honored in 2015 with the SIAM/ACM Prize in Computational Science and Engineering.[5] She was elected as a fellow of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) in 2017, "for contributions to scalable numerical algorithms and software libraries for solving large-scale scientific and engineering problems".[6]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Lois Curfman McInnes, Argonne National Laboratory, retrieved 2017-04-25.
- ^ Lois V. Curfman at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ "SIAM Activity Groups Election Results". SIAM News. Retrieved 2022-05-28.
- ^ Argonne's Barry Smith and Lois Curfman McInnes Win E.O. Lawrence Award, Eleanor Taylor, Argonne National Laboratory, November 29, 2011, retrieved 2017-04-25.
- ^ SIAM/ACM Prize in Computational Science and Engineering, retrieved 2017-04-25.
- ^ SIAM Fellows: Class of 2017, retrieved 2017-04-25.
External links
edit- Lois Curfman McInnes publications indexed by Google Scholar