skip page navigationOregon State University
OSU Home. |

    Invited Talks

    1. What to Teach? Computational Science as an Improved Model for Science Education,
      1. Microsoft Faculty Summit, Redmond, July 2008.
    2. Computational Physics, Research, and Education
      1. Gordon Research Conference, Smithfield, RI, June 2008.
      2. AAPT Summer Meeting, Edmonton, July 2008.
    3. Computational Physics: Advancing Physics Education
      1. UCD, Davis, Feb. 2008.
      2. Cal. State. Univ, Long Beach, Feb. 2008.
      3. Applied Math & Computation Seminar, OSU Math Dept., Feb, 2008.
    4. Computational Science Education for All, SC07 Education Program, Reno, Nov. 2007.
    5. Computational Physics, A Path for Physics Ed?
      1. University of Nevada, Reno, Nov. 2007.
      2. Conference on Computing in Physics Education, Davidson College, July, 2007.
    6. Computational Physics A Better Model for Physics Ed?
      1. AAPT Summer Meeting, Syracuse, July 2006.
      2. Int. Conf. Computational Sci. and Education, Rochester, Aug. 2006
      3. South African Physical Soc. Annual Meeting, Capetown, Sept. 2006.
      4. Conf. on Computational Phys. 2006, Korea, Sept. 2006.
    7. Ethics in the University, Dept. of Philosophy, OSU OSU, May 29, 2003.
    8. Elements of Computational Science Education, SIAM Annual Computational Science Meeting, San Diego, February, 2003.
    9. Tutorial on Computational Physics Education, SC2002, Baltimore, Nov. 2002.
    10. Panel Member, How to Get Computational Science into the Undergraduate Curriculum?, SC2002, Baltimore, Nov. 2002.
    11. Elements of Computational Science Education, Intl. Conf. on Computational Physics, CCP2002, Amer. Phys. Soc., Div. of Computational Physics Annual Meeting, San Diego, Aug. 2002.
    12. Computational Physics Turorials, National Computational Science Institute Workshop, June 2002, Corvallis .
    13. Panel Member, Do Undergraduate Faculty Know that Computational Sciences the Future?, SC2001, Denver, Nov. 2001.
    14. Demonstration, NPACI booth, Elements of Computational Science Education, SC2001, Denver, Nov. 2001.
    15. Demonstration, NPACI booth, Future Digital Scientific Documents, SC2001, Denver, Nov. 2001.
    16. Bird of a Feather Panel, Are HPC Needs Being Met by University Education?, SC2001, Denver, Nov. 2001.
    17. Developing a BS Curriculum in Computational Physics/Science, APS Div. Computational Physics Annual Meeting, San Diego, Aug. 2001.
    18. Invited Talk, Future Digital Documents for Science & Education, HPC Asia, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, Sept. 2001.
    19. Education Forum, A Research-Rich Bachelor's Degree Program in Computational Physics, HPC Asia, Gold Coast, Queensland, Sept. 2001.
    20. Panel Session, Virtual Organizations, HPC Asia, Gold Coast, Queensland, Sept. 2001.
    21. A Research-Rich Bachelor's Degree Program in Computational Physics , Dept. of Physics & Mathematical Physics, Adelaide, University, Sept. 2001.
    22. Developing Components and Curricula for a Research-Rich Undergraduate Degree in Computational Physics, AC3 Research & Education Forum, University of Sydney, School of Physics, Sept. 2001.
    23. Developing Components and Curricula for a Research-Rich Undergraduate Degree in Computational Physics, APS/DCOMP Annual Meeting, Cambridge, June 2001.
    24. Developing Components and Curricula for a Research-Rich Undergraduate Degree in Computational Physics, Intl. Conf. Computl. Sci. 2001, May 2001, San Francisco.
    25. Web, Education, and Computational Physics; Good, Bad, and Ugly, invited talk, Intl Conference on Computational Physics 1998, Granada, September 1998.
    26. Issues in Network-Based Learning , Third, NSF, MetaCenter Regional Alliance, Train-the Trainer Workshop, San Diego Supercomputer Center, San Diego, 26-27 June, 1998.
    27. Web Based Distance Learning: Some Good, Some Bad, and Some Ugly , Conference on Electronic Training, ASC, Major Shared Resource Center, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, OH 6 May 1998.
    28. Computational Physics: A Web-Enhanced Book and Course , SuperComputing 97: High Performance Networking and Computing, San Jose, November 1997.
    29. Computational Physics: A Web-Enhanced Book and Course , San Diego State University, November 1997.
    30. Computational/HPC Physics Education , (talk and session chair), Physics Computing 97, International Conference on Computational Physics, Santa Cruz, August 1997.
    31. Web Tutorials in Nonlinear Dynamics , Institute for Nonlinear Science, University California, San Diego, May 1997.
    32. Workshop in Electronic Training , Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, 6-7 March 1997. Gave invited talk, The Web and Education: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly , coauthored report,\\ http://msrc.wpafb.af.mil/msrc/PET/frame.html.
    33. Computational Physics: A Web-Enhanced Book and Course, SC97: High Performance Networking and Computing, San Jose, November 1997.
    34. Workshop in Electronic Training, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, 6-7 March 1997. Gave invited talk, The Web and Education: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly, coauthored report, http://msrc.wpafb.af.mil/msrc/PET/frame.html.
    35. IEEE Computer Society Workshop on Computational Science and Engineering, Purdue, Panel Member: Future of Computational Science & Engineering Undergraduate Education, October 1996.
    36. IEEE Computer Society Workshop on Computational Science and Engineering, Purdue, Computational Science & Engineering Educational Materials: Books, Websites, and Courses, October 1996.
    37. Institute of Research, University of Warsaw, Poland, Computers, Physics, Education, and All That, May 1996.
    38. Institute of Research, University of Warsaw, Poland, The Interaction of Antikaons with Nucleons and Nuclei, May 1996.
    39. Mesons'96 International Conference, Krakow, Poland, Revealing Singularities in tex2html_wrap_inline531 N and tex2html_wrap_inline533 N Interactions, May 1996.
    40. Mesons'96 International Conference, Krakow, Poland, Chairman of Session on New Techniques; R.H. Landau, May 1996.
    41. UCES 1995 Award Ceremonies, Washington, D.C., Computational Physics Course & Laboratory Development, http://model.ams.ameslab.gov/awards/ugcsa95/.
    42. Supercomputing'95, San Diego, Panel Member, Assessment of Publications in Computational Science and Engineering, December, 1995.
    43. DAE Symposium on Nuclear Physics, Uktal University, India, Quark Models of the Low-Energy tex2html_wrap_inline535 and tex2html_wrap_inline537 Interactions, 1994.
    44. Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar, India, The Role of Physics in Computational Science, December 1994
    45. Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar, India, The tex2html_wrap_inline539 -Nucleon and Interactions at Low Energies, December 1994.
    46. Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre, Calcutta, India, The -Nucleon Interaction, December 1994.
    47. Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre, Calcutta, India, The Role of Physics in Computational Science, December 1994.
    48. Department of Physics, Univ. of Nevada, Reno, Atomic and Nuclear Exotic Bound States, February, 1993.
    49. Amer. Phys. Soc., Washington, D.C., Few Body Systems Session, Session Organizer and Chairman, April 1993.
    50. Amer. Phys. Soc., Washington, D.C., Bound States, Resonances, and Poles in Low Energy Antikaon Interactions, April 1993.
    51. Amer. Phys. Soc., Washington, D.C., Visualizations while Computing Particle Scattering & Exotic Bound States, April, 1992.
    52. Conference On Computational Quantum Physics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Exotic Gamow States of Atoms, Nuclei, and Particles, 1991.
    53. National Institute for Nuclear Theory, December 1991.
      1. Bound States, Resonances, and Poles in the Low Energy Interactions of Antikaons with Nucleons and Nuclei
      2. Exotic Gamow States of Atoms, Nuclei, and Particles in Momentum Space
    54. National Institute for Nuclear Theory, A Review of The Low Energy Antikaon-Nucleon Interaction, July, 1992.
    55. IBM TJ Watson Research Center, Computational Science, Computer Science, and Higher Education, July 1991.
    56. TRIUMF, Antikaon Interactions with Nucleons and Nuclei, Vancouver, June 1990.
    57. Florida State University, Tallahassee, Bound States, Resonances, and Poles in the Low Energy Interactions of Antikaons with Nucleons and Nuclei, March, 1990.
    58. IBM Forum for Physical Sciences, Tucson, Scientific Computing at Universities with Workstations and Supercomputers, November 1989.
    59. Panel Discussion, American Physical Society, Nuclear Physics Computing Needs in the 1990's: The Scientific Workstation, Asilomar, October 1989.
    60. University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Antikaon and Antiproton Interactions with Nucleons and Nuclei, April, 1989.
    61. University of Connecticut, Storrs, Gamow States in Momentum Space, March, 1989.
    62. IBM, T.J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, Workstations in Academia, February 1989.
    63. University of Melbourne, Australia, December, 1988
      1. Gamow States in Momentum Space
      2. A Microscopic Optical Potential for Proton-He Scattering
      3. Nucleon and Nucleus Reactions
    64. Flinders University of South Australia, Adelaide, Atomic and Nuclear Gamow States in Momentum Space, November 1988.
    65. University of Adelaide, Australia, November, 1988
      1. Gamow States in Momentum Space
      2. Coulomb plus Strong Interactions of Antikaons with Nucleons and Nuclei
    66. University of Washington, Seattle, Kaonic and Antiprotonic Bound States, July 1988.
    67. Protonium, Baryonium, and Kaonic Hydrogen in Momentum Space, XI Nuclear Physics Symposium, Oaxtepec, Mexico, January 4-8, 1988.
    68. Institute fur Theoretische Physik, Karl-Franzens-Universitat Graz, Austria, Coulomb and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, June, 1985.
    69. Meson Exchange Currents and On-Shell Effects in p-He Scattering, European Symposium on Dynamics of Few-Body Systems, Balatonfured, Hungary, June, 1985.
    70. Kaonic Hydrogen and Helium, Int. Symposium on Mesons and Light Nuclei, Bechyne Castle, CSSR, May 1985.
    71. Coupled Bound and Continuum Eigenstates in Momentum Space, Eighth Symposium on Nuclear Physics, Oaxtepec, Mexico, January 8-10, 1985.
    72. TRIUMF, Vancouver, Canada, Supermicrocomputer Workstations for Physics and Astronomy, July, 1984.
    73. TRI University Meson Facility, Vancouver, Canada, Proton-Helium 3 Interactions with Some Anti-Symmetry, June, 1984.
    74. Coulomb and Nuclear Bound States of Kaons, American Physical Society, Washington, D.C., April 23-26, 1984.
    75. Duke/University of North Carolina/North Carolina State, Durham, North Carolina, Exotic Atoms or Hypernuclei, January 19, 1984.
    76. University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, Exotic Bound Systems, January, 18, 1984.
    77. Department of Physics, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, Kaonic Hydrogen in Momentum Space, Colloquium, October, 1983.
    78. Swiss Institute for Nuclear Research (SIN), Villigen, Switzerland, Atomic and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, Theory, August, 1983.
    79. Nucleon-Three Nucleon Scattering with Full Spin Dependence and Antisymmetrized Amplitudes, 10th Int. Conf. on Few Body Problems in Physics, Karlsruhe, Germany, August, 1983.
    80. TRIUMF, Vancouver, Canada, Atomic and Nuclear Bound States in Momentum Space, General Seminar, July, 1983.
    81. Department of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, Is an Exotic Atom or a Hypernucleus, Theory Seminar, January, 1983.
    82. Atomic and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, Int. Conf. on Hypernuclear and Kaon Physics, Heidelberg, Germany, June, 1982. MPIH-1982- V20, B. Povh, Ed., pp. 311-320.
    83. Department of Physics, University of Pittsburgh, Atomic and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, November 17, 1982.
    84. Department of Physics, Reed College, Portland, Oregon, Atomic and Nuclear Bound State of Kaonic Hydrogen, November 3, 1982.
    85. Physical Science Laboratory of the Free University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, Atoms and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, July, 1982.
    86. Nuclear Physics Institute, Czechoslovak Academy of Science, Rez, Czechoslovakia, Atomic and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, June, 1982.
    87. Institut de Physique Nucleaire de Lyon, Universite Claude Bernard, Atomic and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, June, 1982.
    88. CERN (European Center for Nuclear Research), Geneva, Switzerland, Atomic and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, June, 1982.
    89. Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of Tuebingen, Germany, Atomic and Nuclear Bound States of Kaonic Hydrogen, June, 1982.
    90. Tel Aviv University, Department of Physics, Israel, Pion and Kaon Interactions with the Three Nucleon System, April, 1982.
    91. Weizmann Institute of Science, Department of Nuclear Physics, Rehovoth, Israel
      1. A Survey of the Interactions of Mesons with Nuclei, April, 1982.
      2. Scaling and Nonscaling in Pion and Proton Production, April, 1982.
    92. Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, Kaonic Hydrogen Atoms in Momentum Space, April, 1982.
    93. Department of Nuclear Physics, Oxford University, England, Probing the Nucleus with Pions and Kaons, March, 1982.
    94. Department of Physics, University of Liverpool, England, Pion and Kaon Interactions with the Three Nucleon System, October, 1981.
    95. Department of Physics, University of Manchester, England, The Pion Nucleus Interaction, October, 1981.
    96. Daresbury Nuclear Physics Laboratory, Warrington, England, Scaling and Nonscaling in Relativistic Nuclear Collisions, October, 1981.
    97. University of Surrey, Guildford, England, The Pion Nucleus Interaction, October, 1981.
    98. Drexel University, Department of Physics, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Scaling Non-Scaling in Relativistic Nuclear Collisions, June, 1981.
    99. Rutgers University, Department of Physics, Piscataway, New Jersey, The Meson-Nucleus Interaction, June, 1981.
    100. Nuclear Interactions Group, British Physical Society, Pion Production in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions, November, 1981.
    101. Fifth High Energy Heavy Ion Study, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California, May, 1981 (chaired Session).
    102. Workshop on the Future of Pion-Nucleus Interactions, Pion-Nucleus Interactions: Multiple Scattering Approach, Vancouver, 1979.
    103. High Energy Physics and Nuclear Structure, Vancouver, Pion-Nucleus Interactions, 1980.
    104. Meson-Nuclear Physics, Houston, Inclusive Pion Production in Proton and Ion Collisions with Nuclei, 1979.
    105. LAMPF Workshop on Pion Single Charge Exchange, Elastic and Charge Exchange Scattering of Pions from the 3 and 4 Nucleon System, 1979.
    106. Relativistic Heavy Ion Workshop, Edmonton, Comparison of Proton and Pion Single Particle Inclusive Production, December, 1978.
    107. Pion-Nucleus Scattering Summer School, Los Alamos, Pauli Principle Effects in Pion-Nucleus Scattering, July, 1973.