James
J. Hack
James J. Hack directs the National Center for Computational
Sciences (NCCS), a leadership computing facility at Oak Ridge National
Laboratory supporting transformational science. He identifies major high
performance computing needs from scientific and hardware perspectives and
develops strategies to meet those needs as machines evolve past the petascale,
the ability to carry out a quadrillion calculations per second. An atmospheric
scientist, Dr. Hack also leads ORNL’s Climate Change Initiative.
After
receiving a Ph.D. in atmospheric dynamics from Colorado State University in
1980, Dr. Hack became a research staff member at the IBM Thomas J. Watson
Research Center, where he worked on the design and evaluation of
high-performance computing architectures. In 1984 he moved to the National
Center for Atmospheric Research, a National Science Foundation-sponsored
center, where his roles included senior scientist, head of the Climate Modeling
Section, and deputy director of the Climate and Global Dynamics Division. He
was one of the principal developers of the climate model that ran on NCCS
supercomputers to provide more than one-third of the simulation data jointly
contributed by the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation to
the most recent assessment report of the United Nations’ Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, the group that shared the 2007 Nobel peace Prize with
Al Gore. He has also held an adjoint professor position at the University of
Colorado at Boulder and is author or co-author of 98 scientific or technical
publications.
Dr. Hack
is a member of the DOE’s Advanced Scientific Computing Advisory Committee and
the Working Group on Numerical Experimentation, sponsored by the Joint
Scientific Committee for the World Climate Research Program and the World
Meteorological Organization Committee for Atmospheric Sciences. He also chairs
the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory/Program for Climate Model Diagnosis
and Intercomparison Advisory Committee. He has served on the ORNL Computer
Science and Mathematics Division Advisory Committee, a wide variety of NSF
high-performance computing review and advisory panels, the U.S. Water Cycle
Scientific Steering Group, and was editor for the Journal of Climate. He was
also a founding member of DOE’s Computational Science Graduate Fellowship
Program, a highly successful educational initiative in which he continues to
participate.