Scientists chip away at a metallic mystery, one atom at a time
It’s no secret that radiation weakens metal. Sandia researchers are uncovering how.
Build-a-satellite program could fast track national security space missions
Valhalla, a modeling framework developed at Sandia, uses high-performance computing to design satellites, saving researchers months of creating preliminary designs.
Hruby Fellow tackles big problems in climate by focusing on smallest details
In her three years at Sandia, Kelsey DiPietro has accelerated research through computer modeling. Read about Kelsey’s work in this profile offered as part of the “Sandia Loves Science” campaign.
Getting the stars back together again
The Labs hosted the Rising Stars in Computational and Data Sciences workshop last month in Albuquerque. This year's event offered opportunities for women graduate students and postdoctoral appointees to collaborate in person.
International collaboration compares geologic repository assessment tools
Sandia researchers have developed software that supports the assessment of possible sites to dispose of spent nuclear fuel in the future.
Neuromorphic computing widely applicable, Sandia researchers show
Brain-based computing chips can solve more complex problems than those posed by artificial intelligence and may even apply to high-performance computing.
Sandia researchers update software tool for wind turbine blades
They hope to build a community of wind energy researchers at national laboratories, universities and more through their work.
Team develops roadmap to automated driving future
A group of international engineers from Sandia and partner organizations are working to understand how challenges on the road can be entered into a computer to achieve highly automated driving in demanding environments.
Powerful Sandia machine-learning model shows diamond melting at high pressure
Improvements to software and hardware shorten the process from one year to a day.
How Sandia is revealing the inner workings of quantum computers
Researchers use gate set tomography to discover and validate two innovations, now published in Nature.