Eike Mueller
SSI fellow
University of Bath
Interests
My research interests lie in the area of scientific computing. I am implementing massively parallel solvers together with the Met Office, lead the development of a performance-portable molecular dynamics framework and work on novel multilevel Monte Carlo algorithms. I pass on my knowledge to students by teaching parallel computing and modern software development techniques.
My work
I became hooked on writing research software during my PhD in computational particle physics (Lattice QCD) at the University of Edinburgh. Since then I contributed to a range of software-driven interdisciplinary research projects.
After my PhD I spent two years at the Met Office, where I was responsible for the parallelisation and optimisation of the NAME atmospheric dispersion model; this code was used to predict the spread of ash clouds from the Eyjafjallajokull eruption in 2010. I then moved to the University of Bath as a PostDoc to develop massively parallel multigrid solvers for atmospheric forecast models and I currently work with RSEs at the Met Office to integrate those algorithms into the next generation model code. As a Lecturer in the Department of Mathematical Sciences in Bath I advocate good practices in software development in my teaching and when working with postgraduate students. I introduce final year students to parallel programming in a course on Scientific Computing which I taught in the last years. For my research I collaborate with computational chemists on the development of a performance-portable framework for molecular dynamics and continue to work with the Met Office on the development of new multilevel Monte Carlo methods for atmospheric dispersion modelling.
I look forward to engage with the RSE community through the Software Sustainability Institute. As an Fellow I want to build on training in using revision control which I already deliver to our now PhD students and become more involved in Software-Carpentry-style tutorials on a wider scale. I plan to bring together other scientists and RSEs to organise an workshop on debugging numerical codes - an area which is important but often not explored systematically. Here I am particularly keen to build on growing momentum in the GW4 community of unversities in the Southwest which recently delivered the world's first ARM based supercomputer, Isambard.
Online Presence
Follow me on Twitter @eikehmueller
Check out contributions by and mentions of Eike Mueller on www.software.ac.uk
Read posts on this website by Eike
Lessons from a workshop on “Debugging Numerical Software”
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Five failed tests for scientific software
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Bridging the gap: Convincing researchers with different backgrounds to adopt good (enough) software development practices
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