Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
33 lines (24 loc) · 2.49 KB

index.md

File metadata and controls

33 lines (24 loc) · 2.49 KB
title layout group
Iris' homepage
home
home
{: .display-4}

Diffraction simulation artifacts{:style="width: auto; max-width: 90%; margin:0"}

Hello! You have found Iris' homepage. He is currently in the process of moving to HARBOR (at DESY) in Hamburg, Germany. This introduction will be updated shortly. {: .welcomefont}

Iris worked most recently as a project scientist in the Sauter group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory on the (exa)scale computing for X-ray (f)ree (e)lectron (l)aser diffraction experiments (ExaFEL) project, bringing our XFEL crystallography data processing tools to the exascale regime. As the world's five instruments capable of these experiments undergo upgrades to enable kHz or MHz image acquisition rates, we are preparing to be able to process these datasets in real time and provide the feedback necessary to drive these experiments. Our code is all open source and is available on github: the cctbx_project and dials repos make up the core of the codebase, while our scripts and notes for the ExaFEL project are available in the exafel_project repo. Some side projects like the diffraction simulation viewer have their own homes as well.

{: .welcomefont}

Outside of the lab, Iris is a coffee afficionado, student of various languages, avid reader, and learner. When he has time he also enjoys electronics, fixing stuff, 3d printing, sewing, aikido, pottery, cooking, baking, bicycling and walking. He is queer/trans/nonbinary and uses pronouns he/him, they/them or she/her.

Iris is reachable at [email protected]. He is also active on the fediverse via mastodon and has some work on up github. Publications including associated links and full text pdfs are available on the publications tab, and should also be associated with his ORCID record.

Fact: Iris is 70% coffee by volume. {: .welcomefont}