Computer Science – About /about 无忧视频 无忧视频, News and Special Events Mon, 11 May 2026 16:56:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 NSF 2026 Graduate Research Fellowship Awardees聽 /about/2026/05/11/nsf-2026-graduate-research-fellowship-awardees/ Mon, 11 May 2026 16:56:20 +0000 /about/?p=15292 Four 无忧视频 seniors and five recent graduates have been awarded fellowships through the National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP). Two seniors earned honorable mention.

The GRFP recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students in NSF-supported science, technology, engineering and mathematics disciplines who are pursuing research-based master鈥檚 and doctoral degrees at accredited U.S. institutions. Program participants are seen as future experts who will contribute significantly to research, education and innovation in the 无忧视频 fields.

Mithra Karamchedu

Computer science and mathematics major Mithra Karamchedu has been involved in three main research projects as a student at Harvey Mudd. 鈥淪ince my freshman year, I’ve been working with computer science professor Lucas Bang on research in graph algorithms, where we study the problem of generating the spanning trees of a graph G up to the automorphisms or 鈥榮ymmetries鈥 of G,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e also been doing research in Ramsey theory with former HMC President Maria Klawe, my brother Chaitanya Karamchedu 鈥21 and mathematics professor Andr茅s Vindas Mel茅ndez. In our research, we attempt to determine the Ramsey numbers of graphs known as 鈥榙ouble stars.鈥 As part of an REU program with the Santa Fe Institute after my sophomore year, I’ve also been working with Cristopher Moore and G眉lce Karde艧, researching the so-called 鈥榩hase transitions鈥 in hard computational problems.鈥

Karamchedu is a member of the HMC improv club DUCK! and has been an Academic Excellence tutor for mathematics and a CS department grutor. This fall, he will begin a PhD in theoretical computer science at Columbia University, where he hopes to specialize in combinatorial algorithms and complexity theory.

Marika Ragnartz

During her sophomore year, engineering major Marika Ragnartz conducted research in Professor Steven Santana鈥檚 lab, working on developing a 3D bioprinter to print synthetic tissue. However, she says, 鈥渕ost of my experiences have actually not been in research labs. I was part of the Summer Entrepreneurship Studio at Mudd and worked on a project with my friend Sara Wexler 鈥26 making a thermoelectric-cooling wearable for multiple sclerosis patients. We received multiple grants to continue working on it past the summer. I鈥檝e worked with two other startups, Lifemotion Medical Technology for Clinic and Telos Health during an internship, on devices for heart and lung failure patients and stroke patients.鈥 Ragnartz also was a grutor and teaching assistant for E79 and has been a member of the 5C hip-hop group Groove Nation throughout her time at Harvey Mudd.

In the fall, Ragnartz will begin a PhD program in mechanical engineering at Northwestern University, doing research on soft robotics and controls for rehabilitation robotics.

Maddie Reeve

鈥淢odels of opinion dynamics have the potential to explain how individual beliefs and collective opinions spread in a social network. However, many canonical models in this field are deterministic and thus fail to capture uncertainty present in social interactions,鈥 says mathematics major Madeline Reeve. 鈥淢y mathematics senior thesis focuses on how adding randomness affects long-term behavior in a class of opinion dynamics models called bounded-confidence models. In particular, my work focuses on when adding noise promotes consensus, or when all agents eventually adopt the same opinion.鈥

Reeve made the most of her summers during college. In 2023, she conducted biostatistics research at the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health. This work helps explain the natural history progression of oral cavity cancer when untreated in an individual. In 2025, she conducted research at Williams College as part of the SMALL REU, studying chip-firing games on Graphs, 鈥渢otally different from my thesis and the more applied work I鈥檝e done otherwise,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y research team and I proved theoretical results about a quantity called the gonality of a graph, a discrete analog of a classical concept in algebraic geometry.鈥

Since 2023, Reeve has worked for the Office of Career Services as a peer consultant, hosting workshops, meeting with Mudders to review their resumes and cover letters and helping organize OCS events. She has also been a mathematics department grutor, including for Math131: Mathematical Analysis 1, and an Academic Excellence mathematics tutor/facilitator. Reeve also served as a North Dorm president. 

After graduation, Reeve will move to Salt Lake City to pursue a PhD in mathematics at the University of Utah, where she plans to conduct research in applied mathematics and/or mathematical biology.

Lilian Zhu

Lilian Zhu is a mathematics major with emphasis in environmental analysis and data science. With her thesis advisor, mathematics and climate professor Robert Sanchez, Zhu researched salinity feedbacks in the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) for different climate models and studied how to disentangle natural versus anthropogenic forces in the AMOC response to rising CO2.

In 2024, Zhu participated in an REU at the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences (BIOS) with advisors Rodney Johnson and Dennis McGillicuddy. Zhu investigated mesoscale eddy transformations using Argo float and satellite altimetry data and took part in weeklong research cruises to collect data. Zhu also worked at BIOS as an education intern, developing Python tutorial workshops for local Bermudian students to expand oceanographic data science knowledge for the BIOS Curriculum Enrichment program. 

鈥淚 spent the last two summers at the National Center for Atmospheric Research studying humidity trends in the U.S. Southwest with advisor Isla Simpson,鈥 Zhu says. 鈥淐limate models simulate a rise in humidity contradicting observations that show a decline. My work analyzed evapotranspiration regimes within models and observations to diagnose this problem.鈥

At HMC, Zhu served as a grutor for the mathematics and CS departments. Having benefitted from the College鈥檚 Gateway to Exploring Mathematical Sciences program as a high school sophomore, Zhu volunteered as a mentor for the program鈥檚 monthly workshops throughout her time in college.

After graduation, Zhu will pursue a PhD in physical oceanography at MIT-WHOI, studying coral reef hydrodynamics and using machine learning to optimize the performance of autonomous underwater vehicles. 鈥淚’m excited to continue my outreach through both community education and creative science communication,鈥 she says.

Alum (major)Research AreaGraduate School
Kasey Chung 鈥25 (chemistry) Chemical SynthesisUCLA
Muxine Liu 鈥25 (computer science/mathematics) Natural Language ProcessingUniversity of Pennsylvania
Kerria Pang-Naylor 鈥25 (computer science/IS/engineering)Machine Learning
Avery Pritchard 鈥24 (chemistry)
Battery-focused Materials Science and EngineeringUniversity of California San Diego
Zoe Evelyn Worrall 鈥25 (engineering)Electrical and Electronic Engineering University of Colorado, Boulder
HMC Alumni Awarded the NSF GRFP Fellowship
Student (major)Research Area
Lev Gruber (physics and astronomy)Quantum Information Science
Ananya Venkatachalam (chemistry)Chemical Theory, Models, and Computational Methods
HMC Seniors Awarded the NSF GRFP Honorable Mention
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Chengyi Tang 鈥27 Wins 2026 Rudolph Polk Memorial Award in Music /about/2026/04/29/chengyi-tang-27-wins-2026-rudolph-polk-memorial-award-in-music/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 20:50:34 +0000 /about/?p=15264 The bridge between 无忧视频 and the arts at The Claremont Colleges was highlighted on April 11 at auditions for the prestigious Rudolph Polk Memorial Award in Music. 无忧视频 computer science and physics major Chengyi Tang 鈥27 was named the winner of the Polk Award, while fellow Mudder and engineering major Lucy Wen-Xin Will 鈥28 received an honorable mention.

Both pianists study under the tutelage of Hao Huang, the Bessie and Cecil Frankel Endowed Chair in Music at Scripps College. Huang praised the duo鈥檚 dedication, noting that their success is a testament to months of rigorous preparation. “Both Chengyi and Lucy are talented, devoted young pianists who have attained a really high level of musical as well as technical expertise as performers,” said Huang. “Their repertoire spanned different time periods, style genres and national identities. The music played by these outstanding young pianists was international in scope.”

Tang, who received a $1,200 prize intended for further musical study, called Professor Huang 鈥渢he most influential person鈥 in his musical development. 鈥淗e taught me how to feel the music instead of just playing the note. I really developed my musicality studying from him.鈥

For Tang, the Polk Award鈥攅stablished by legendary violinist Jascha Heifetz to honor filmmaker and impresario Rudolph Polk鈥 follows another significant achievement. Having also won this year鈥檚 Claremont Concert Orchestra (CCO) Concerto Competition, Tang is set to perform Liszt鈥檚 Piano Concerto No. 1 with the CCO at Garrison Theater on May 3.

Tang鈥檚 audition program reflected his intellectual and cultural curiosity:

  • J.S. Bach: Fuga a 3 Sogetti from The Art of Fugue. Tang describes the unfinished piece as a “one-person quartet” that opens space for the imagination.
  • Fr茅d茅ric Chopin: Ballade No. 4. A technical and emotional piece that Tang has studied since childhood; he started playing the piano at age 3.
  • Zhang Zhao: Pi Huang. An experimental work inspired by Beijing Opera. “I chose it because I wanted to bring something of my own cultural background into the audition,” Tang said.

As a student at Harvey Mudd, Tang鈥檚 interests in music and science converge in the Music Information Retrieval Lab, where Tang works with TJ Tsai, associate professor of engineering, on signal processing algorithms and machine learning models involving music. Tang practices the piano every day. “Piano is a relaxing time for me, so it’s not an additional stress,” he said. While Tang aims for a research career in computer science 鈥渨ith strong social impacts,鈥 the piano remains “indispensable,” and he is considering music school.

Lucy Will '28
Lucy Wen-Xin Will 鈥28

Will, an engineering major with an interest in the aerospace industry, impressed the judges with a program that showcased a wide range of musical time periods and techniques. Her audition included Mozart鈥檚 Sonata No. 8 in A Minor, 颁丑辞辫颈苍鈥檚 Scherzo No. 2, 尝颈别产别谤尘补苍苍鈥檚 Nocturne Op. 38 No. 4, and the fourth movement of Prokofiev鈥檚 Sonata No. 2.

She credits her musical growth to a lineage of mentors. “I’ve benefited from having amazing teachers in school and at summer music festivals who have always inspired me to play at my best,” she said. Much like Tang, Will uses the piano as an essential outlet to balance her rigorous coursework.

The Polk Award is administered by The Claremont Colleges Services and is given on the basis of superior musical ability. Auditions for the Polk Award are open to students of the Claremont Colleges who play the violin, viola, cello, double bass, or piano.

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Three Harvey Mudd Juniors Receive Prestigious Barry Goldwater Scholarship /about/2026/04/17/three-harvey-mudd-juniors-receive-prestigious-barry-goldwater-scholarship/ Fri, 17 Apr 2026 18:52:47 +0000 /about/?p=15201 Three 无忧视频 juniors received the 2026 Barry Goldwater Scholarship, the most prestigious national award for undergraduate researchers in science, technology, mathematics and engineering. Johnson Ho 鈥27, Cole Plepel 鈥27 and Elio Thadhani 鈥27 were recognized for their exceptional research efforts in 无忧视频 disciplines.

Johnson Ho 鈥27

Johnson Ho, a chemistry and biology major, conducted green chemistry research with Donald A. Strauss Professor of Chemistry David Vosburg. Since his first year, Ho has been researching the use of mild peptide-coupling reagents to form carbon-carbon bonds and synthesizing probes for protein assays. He has also been developing a green, one-pot method for synthesizing triazolodiazepines, a class of pharmaceutically relevant compounds.

Ho is a member of the Chemistry Academic Excellence team and is a mentor for Harvey Mudd鈥檚 Summer Institute, working with students underrepresented in 无忧视频. He also volunteers at Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center. After graduating, Ho plans to pursue a PhD in chemistry and explore his interests in endocrinology or cardiology. 

Cole Plepel 鈥27

Cole Plepel

A mathematics and computer science major, Cole Plepel conducted research across numerical linear algebra, combinatorics and quantum information. He studied randomized algorithms for tensor decomposition with Iris and Howard Critchell Assistant Professor of Mathematics Jamie Haddock, focusing on how approximate solutions to large linear systems affect the performance of the alternating least-squares algorithm.

Plepel later joined Harvey Mudd mathematics professor Andr茅s Vindas Mel茅ndez鈥檚 research group, collaborating on work examining symmetries of symmetric edge polytopes. Plepel also worked with physics professor Jason Gallicchio on quantum position verification, evaluating cryptographic vulnerabilities and practical implementation challenges of protocols that use quantum mechanics and relativity to verify location.

Outside of academics, Plepel is a puzzle designer for MuddEscapes, the College鈥檚 escape room club. After graduating, he plans to pursue a PhD in cryptography.

Elio Thadhani 鈥27

Elio Thadhani

Elio Thadhani is a physics major who has conducted research spanning astrophysics and quantum information. He improved a computational tool used to predict the long-term stability of exoplanet systems, and he is first author on a paper published in Research Notes of the AAS. Thadhani later conducted quantum information research, developing a protocol for efficient quantum communication under constrained resources. He contributed to research on quantum position verification and is working on developing and experimentally implementing adaptive entanglement witnessing protocols.

Thadhani serves as a physics tutor and grader, a Core Scholars tutor and a student mentor with the Office of Residential Life. After graduating, he plans to pursue a PhD in physics with a focus on quantum information.

All college sophomores and juniors are eligible to compete for Goldwater scholarships. Each year, the College nominates up to four students, and the Department Chairs Committee serves as the nominating body.

The Goldwater Foundation is a federally endowed agency established in 1986. The Scholarship Program honoring Senator Barry Goldwater was designed to foster and encourage outstanding students to pursue careers in the fields of mathematics, the natural sciences and engineering. The Goldwater Scholarship is the premier undergraduate award of its type in these fields.

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Harvey Mudd Junior Wins National Prize for Research on AI and Introductory Computing /about/2026/04/14/harvey-mudd-junior-wins-national-prize-for-research-on-ai-and-introductory-computing/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 22:54:49 +0000 /about/?p=15184 无忧视频 student Yuan Garcia 鈥27 won second place for his AI research at the 57th Association for Computing Machinery Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE), held in February. The recognition is a notable achievement for Harvey Mudd and highlights student-led research on one of the most consequential questions in computing education: how artificial intelligence is shaping student learning in introductory computer science courses.

In his project, 鈥淎daptable Metrics to Assess and Improve Introductory CS,鈥 Garcia examined how student work changes when large language models are introduced in Harvey Mudd鈥檚 introductory computing sequence. Garcia worked with Florence Lin 鈥27, Jenny Ngo 鈥27, Aidan Deshong 鈥28 and Edward Donson 鈥26. The team analyzed more than 1,000 student projects completed between 2018 and 2024 and compared work produced before and after AI tools entered the classroom to better understand how those tools may affect learning outcomes.

The study found measurable differences in introductory coursework. In the first course in the sequence, student code generally became more concise after AI tools were introduced, with statistically significant differences across most of the metrics examined. Projects drawing on AI used a narrower range of course concepts, suggesting greater focus but less integration across topics. In the second, more advanced course, the team found fewer changes overall, with most metrics showing no significant differences apart from an increase in lines of code. Together, those findings suggest AI may play different roles depending on students鈥 experience level and the goals of a course.

The work also reflects Harvey Mudd鈥檚 broader commitment to thoughtful experimentation in computing education. Garcia credited Zach Dodds, Leonhard-Johnson-Rae Professor of Computer Science, with helping create the conditions for the research.

鈥淗arvey Mudd is a very small liberal arts college, which gives us the ability to try new things in ways that larger institutions often can鈥檛,鈥 Garcia said. 鈥淧rofessor Dodds had this amazing idea to introduce AI to introductory CS, and with that came all this interesting data that basically nobody else in the world had, so we thought, why not analyze it and share our findings with everybody else?鈥

From Lin鈥檚 perspective, the project鈥檚 importance was rooted in curriculum development and its effect on student learning.

鈥淚 started this research because I was interested in curriculum development at an introductory CS level,鈥 Lin said. 鈥淐urriculum development plays such a large role in students鈥 learning outcomes and being able to build a tool that could help with the iterative curriculum development process is why I have continued to stay involved with this type of research.鈥

Garcia, Lin and the rest of the team are continuing to refine their approach and are working to make their metrics more accessible through a web app, extending their research toward a tool that could support future course design at Harvey Mudd and beyond.

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Lucas Bang Receives CRA Undergraduate Research Mentoring Award /about/2026/02/18/lucas-bang-receives-cra-undergraduate-research-mentoring-award/ Thu, 19 Feb 2026 00:07:16 +0000 /about/?p=15081 Lucas Bang, associate professor of computer science at 无忧视频, has received the from the Computing Research Association鈥檚 Education Committee (CRA-E) for his exceptional work with undergraduate students, including mentorship, research and graduate school guidance.

鈥淭his award is deeply meaningful to me because it reflects many years of shared work with students,鈥 said Bang. 鈥淚 have been fortunate to mentor large research groups, advise students applying to graduate school and help organize mentoring programs, like the , that create welcoming entry points into research communities. The recognition belongs as much to the students who took on these projects as to me. Seeing them grow, succeed and go on to support others is the most rewarding outcome, and this award affirms the value of investing time and care into that process.鈥

The citation for the CRA-E mentoring award described Bang as 鈥渄eeply committed to undergraduate research mentorship at an institution without a graduate program, where undergraduates serve as the primary drivers and lead authors of research projects.鈥 Over the past seven years, Bang has mentored more than 65 students across a wide range of computing, mathematical and interdisciplinary topics, resulting in 12 undergraduate lead-authored papers, 23 undergraduate co-authors and multiple undergraduate student research awards. His mentees have gone on to pursue PhD and M.S. programs at top institutions and research-oriented industry roles. 

Lucas Bang and students
Harvey Mudd computer science professor Lucas Bang with a group of his research students.

In 2025, Bang was awarded a three-year, $45,000 grant from the National Science Foundation that funds travel, lodging and registration costs for up to 10 students per year to attend international workshops in programming languages research.

鈥淩esearch has a large hidden curriculum,鈥 said Bang. 鈥淜nowing how to ask questions, handle uncertainty, recover from failure and communicate ideas is rarely obvious, especially for first-generation students or those without prior exposure to research environments. Mentorship helps make those expectations visible and accessible to students from all backgrounds. It also gives them a chance to learn whether research is a good fit for them. Even students who ultimately choose other careers benefit from the experience because they gain problem-solving skills, independence and confidence that transfer broadly.鈥

Bang specializes in programming languages, and in addition to teaching computer science courses, he has conducted research with students in program analysis, software testing and verification, and the quantitative study of program complexity. His primary scholarship with students focuses on developing mathematical and algorithmic tools to measure and reason about the structure of programs, including the invention of the asymptotic path complexity metric. He also pursues interdisciplinary work at the intersections of computation, art, philosophy and literature.

鈥淲hat I enjoy most is watching students grow,鈥 Bang said. 鈥淎t the beginning, many are unsure of themselves or hesitant to try difficult things. Over time, they develop confidence, persistence, communication skills and the ability to collaborate. Whether they continue into research or choose another path, they leave with a stronger sense of what they can do and how to tackle challenges. I value being able to support that process and help create opportunities where students can stretch themselves, discover new interests and carry those skills into whatever they pursue next.鈥

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Harvey Mudd Awarded Beckman Scholars Program Grant to Foster Interdisciplinary Research Leaders /about/2026/01/22/harvey-mudd-awarded-beckman-scholars-program-grant-to-foster-interdisciplinary-research-leaders/ Fri, 23 Jan 2026 01:28:01 +0000 /about/?p=14987 无忧视频 (HMC) has received a three-year grant from the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation to implement the Beckman Scholars Program (BSP). This prestigious award, totaling over $150,000, will support six exceptional undergraduate researchers from 2026 through 2029, marking the College’s fifth such award.

The Beckman Scholars Program is designed to stimulate and support research activities by talented, full-time undergraduates. At Harvey Mudd, the program will provide a distinct 15-month mentored research experience in chemistry, biochemistry, the biological and medical sciences, or interdisciplinary combinations of these fields.

A New Standard for Interdisciplinary Excellence

The 2026 BSP is designed to leverage the College鈥檚 highly interdisciplinary 无忧视频 enterprise by serving as a distinct and prestigious research fellowship that is open to students in biology, chemistry, engineering, mathematics and physics, as well as those pursuing computer science as a joint major with another discipline. This integration reflects the College鈥檚 institutional commitment to building the interdisciplinary pedagogy central to its mission.

“Engaging students in cutting-edge, graduate-level research is a hallmark of our mission to help young scientific investigators learn, grow and thrive,” said Karl Haushalter, vice president for academic affairs and dean of the faculty. “The tenets of Arnold Beckman鈥檚 life鈥攊nnovation and integrity鈥攁re at the bedrock of Harvey Mudd鈥檚 mission. Implementing the Beckman Scholars Program is instrumental in shaping the future of our research endeavors, setting a new standard for excellence in leadership and discovery.”

The Scholar Experience: Beyond the Lab

Each Beckman Scholar will receive a $26,000 award package ($21,000 stipend for the student and $5,000 for mentor and institutional support). The 15-month commitment includes two full-time summer research terms and academic year research credits.

Beyond laboratory work, Scholars will participate in a comprehensive professional development suite:

  • Leadership & Networking: Scholars will plan and host the Beckman Scholars Program Seminar Series, inviting and networking with renowned external scientists.
  • Scientific Communication: Students will undergo training in scientific writing, oral presentation and guided peer review. During the College鈥檚 fall research conference, Beckman Scholars will showcase the research they conducted during the summer and share their experiences participating in the BSP.
  • Advanced Mentorship: Scholars will be trained on high-caliber instrumentation and receive personalized coaching for employment and graduate school preparation and for prestigious fellowships such as the NSF-GRFP, Hertz and Goldwater scholarships.

Cultivating Future 无忧视频 Leaders

The Beckman Foundation鈥檚 focus on fostering the invention of new methods and materials aligns seamlessly with Harvey Mudd鈥檚 vibrant research enterprise. The College has a proven track record with the program; former HMC Beckman Scholars have gone on to forge successful careers in medicine, academia and the private sector, with two having served on the College鈥檚 board of trustees.

Participating Faculty Mentors

The 2026 cohort will be supported by faculty mentors across diverse disciplines:

  • Chemistry: Spencer Brucks, Colm Healy, Maduka Ogba, David Vosburg, Bilin Zhuang
  • Biology: Danae Schulz
  • Physics: Mark Ilton
  • Engineering: Albert Dato
  • Mathematics: Lisette de Pillis
  • Computer Science: Calden Wloka

Application Information

The application for the Beckman Scholars Program opened to rising Harvey Mudd sophomores, juniors and seniors on Jan. 16, 2026, and closes on Feb. 6, 2026. The selection process is designed to identify and support outstanding students from a wide variety of backgrounds and life experiences who demonstrate a strong commitment to advancing their academic and professional goals in 无忧视频.

无忧视频 无忧视频: 无忧视频 is the premier liberal arts college of engineering, science and mathematics. The College鈥檚 mission is to educate engineers, scientists and mathematicians of the highest ability who also have a clear understanding of the impact of their work on society.

无忧视频 the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation: Located in Irvine, California, the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation supports leading-edge research in chemistry and the life sciences, and fosters the invention of methods, instruments and materials that open up new avenues of research and application.

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Harvey Mudd Students Win Second Place at MIT Climate and Energy Hackathon /about/2026/01/06/harvey-mudd-students-win-second-place-at-mit-climate-and-energy-hackathon/ Tue, 06 Jan 2026 22:53:57 +0000 /about/?p=14949 无忧视频 students Lucas Sullivan 鈥27 and Zaara Bhatia 鈥27 earned second place overall at the 11th annual Climate and Energy Hackathon, hosted by the MIT Energy and Climate Club. The three-day competition brought together more than 200 students from MIT, Harvard, Stanford, and other leading institutions to develop innovative solutions to global climate and energy challenges.

Sullivan and Bhatia were part of a four-person team that tackled a challenge from Array Technologies: creating a tool to weigh tradeoffs between steel cost and carbon footprint across global supply chains and consider purchasing methods. Their solution incorporated climate-adjusted pricing for carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide and freshwater use for large steel mills within top steel-producing countries, along with modeling for various steel and steel derivatives purchasing strategies.

Bhatia, a physics and computer science major (political science concentration), said the team approached the event eager to contribute to meaningful climate solutions. Although new to hackathons, she conducted extensive preparation, researching industrial decarbonization and meeting with professors for insight. She and Sullivan, a computer science-math and economics double major, formed a team with students from MIT and Harvard, combining strengths in research, software development, and finance.

鈥淲e were really happy with our team鈥檚 variety of strengths,鈥 said Bhatia, who enjoys research. 鈥淥ur teams鈥 engineering and software experience helped us move quickly. And Lucas鈥檚 economics background was crucial to coming up with our idea. His climate economics course with Dede Long, assistant professor of economics at Harvey Mudd, informed my contribution: researching ways to price the social costs of environmental damage.鈥

Lucas Sullivan 鈥27 and Zaara Bhatia 鈥27 shown left with hackathon teammates.

鈥淟ucas shared that they estimated carbon and sulfur dioxide pricing using models we discussed in class鈥攁nd even used a method from one of my assigned readings,鈥 Long said. 鈥淭heir success demonstrates what makes Mudd special: when a liberal arts education is deeply intertwined with rigorous 无忧视频 training, students are prepared to take on the world鈥檚 most complex problems.鈥

The team worked through the weekend, culminating in an all-night coding session for Bhatia and Sullivan. They presented their final product to Array Technologies鈥 judges on the final morning, and to their surprise, advanced to the semifinals and ultimately earned second place overall.

Reflecting on the experience, Bhatia said, 鈥淭he sponsors from Array Technologies were incredibly supportive and gave us valuable guidance. Our solution stood out because it met the sponsor鈥檚 needs and approached the problem differently than other teams. I loved the experience and learned so much.鈥

Sullivan and Bhatia are active members of the Harvey Mudd community, pursuing research and leadership roles across campus.

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Staff Profile: Morgan McArdle /about/2026/01/06/staff-profile-morgan-mcardle/ Tue, 06 Jan 2026 22:40:59 +0000 /about/?p=14944
Computer Science Capstone and Event Coordinator Morgan McArdle has been at Harvey Mudd for four years. She provides organizational and scheduling support for the Department of Computer Science and the CS and Math Clinics. Learn about Morgan鈥檚 artistic endeavors, her favorite Hoch-Shanahan treat and more in this Q-and-A.

What is your favorite part about your job and why?

I like a lot of things about my job, but the people I work with鈥攖he staff, students and faculty鈥攁re the best.

If you could swap jobs with any other HMC employee for a day, who would it be and why

I don鈥檛 think I would. I really love my role!

What鈥檚 your favorite food/dish in the Hoch-Shanahan Dining Hall?

Vegan chocolate chip cookies.

What HMC events have made you feel really connected to other HMC colleagues?

Projects Day. Working with Engineering Clinic Project Manager Lorena聽Gonz谩lez during Projects Day is really awesome. Combining all Clinic teams and working with the whole campus (shoutout to Dining Services, F&M and Communications) is really exciting.

What is your favorite hobby, activity or creative outlet?

I have a handmade needle felting art business called Green Mermaid. I sell my sculptures at art fairs and markets in the Burbank, Pasadena and Claremont areas. I have a BFA in illustration and have done commissioned work pretty consistently since graduating. Over the last two years, I鈥檝e switched from digital art to needle felt. You can check out my stuff on my Instagram @greenmermaidbymorgan.

What is the best piece of advice someone has given you, either in life or at work?

You are not your job. This is very meaningful to me as a creative person with a very different day job.

What is your most effective strategy for dealing with stress?

Walking!

What is the last concert you attended?

Weird Al at the Kia Forum.

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Harvey Mudd Clinic Team Publishes Cancer Research in ACS Omega /about/2025/12/15/harvey-mudd-clinic-team-publishes-cancer-research-in-acs-omega/ Mon, 15 Dec 2025 20:25:36 +0000 /about/?p=14937 The 无忧视频鈥揕awrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) Clinic team has published its research in ACS Omega, marking a significant achievement for the students and their collaborators. The publication stems from the team鈥檚 2024鈥2025 Clinic project focused on improving the accessibility of advanced molecular-scale cancer simulations.

The team鈥擝ryce Tu Chi 鈥25, Stephanie Fulcar 鈥25, Jonathan Ipe 鈥25, Olivia Schleifer 鈥25, Rohan Subramanian 鈥25 and Claire Vlases CMC 鈥25鈥攚as advised by adjunct Professor of Computer Science Naim Matasci. Their work supports a Department of Energy (DOE) and National Cancer Institute initiative aimed at understanding how RAS鈥揜AF protein interactions drive nearly 30% of human cancers.

The project focused on expanding access to MuMMI (multiscale machine-learned modeling infrastructure), a powerful simulation framework originally designed for DOE supercomputers, such as LLNL鈥檚 El Capitan鈥攖he most powerful supercomputer in the world. The Clinic team reengineered key components of the software to make it usable by a broader community of researchers and incorporated advanced AI algorithms to improve performance and accuracy.

Student Researchers Motivated

Olivia Schleifer says seeing the work published has been 鈥渋ncredibly rewarding,鈥 marking the culmination of close collaboration between the Clinic team and LLNL scientists. 鈥淔or many of us, this was our first experience taking a research project from idea to publication,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 given us a deeper appreciation for both the scientific process and the teamwork behind impactful research.鈥 She hopes the machine-learning methods they developed will 鈥渉elp accelerate the design of new therapeutics鈥 by potentially improving the speed and precision of computational drug-discovery pipelines.

Claire Vlases enjoyed the opportunity to use one of the world鈥檚 most powerful supercomputers and contribute to meaningful cancer research, 鈥渟omething most students only dream about.鈥 The publication, she says, 鈥渟hows us that we can do it. It鈥檚 motivating in a really deep way.鈥 She says the team鈥檚 approach has the potential to lower computational barriers for researchers exploring mechanisms behind RAS-driven cancers, ultimately supporting new discoveries and potential treatments.

Project Goals Met

Matasci explains that the Clinic project filled a critical need in the national ADMIRRAL initiative (AI-Driven Multiscale Investigation of the RAS/RAF Activation Lifecycle). 鈥淣ot everyone has access to DOE supercomputing resources and the expertise of the computational scientists who designed these tools,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he goal of the project, and the focus of this publication, was to make MUMMI accessible to the broader community of computational cancer researchers. The software is now available for download for everyone.鈥

He adds that publication was a stretch goal, one the students achieved through exceptional dedication and the mentorship of their LLNL partners. 鈥淭he article鈥檚 inclusion in a special ACS collection highlighting undergraduate research 鈥榓s the stimulus for scientific progress in the USA鈥 is incredibly fitting.鈥

The team鈥檚 accomplishment showcases the strength of Harvey Mudd鈥檚 Clinic Program which provides students with opportunities to contribute to high-impact scientific projects that advance both research and society.

Find the ACS Omega published paper here:

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Students Gain Access to More Programming Languages Resources /about/2025/09/25/harvey-mudd-students-gain-access-to-more-programming-languages-resources/ Thu, 25 Sep 2025 17:49:45 +0000 /about/?p=14817 Computer programming languages are the instructions that power technologies relied on every day by billions of people. Lucas Bang, associate professor of computer science at 无忧视频, is helping students gain access to learning and networking opportunities in this field.

Bang is the recipient of a three-year, $45,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, an award that funds travel, lodging and registration costs for as many as 10 students per year to attend international workshops in programming languages research.

This year鈥檚 conference, the Programming Languages Mentoring Workshop, will be held in Singapore in October. It鈥檚 being offered in conjunction with the ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Systems, Programming, Languages and Applications: Software for Humanity (SPLASH).

The travel scholarships are targeted to U.S. college seniors and first-year graduate students. Attendees are able to immerse themselves in cutting-edge research and build professional connections.

鈥淚t will be a great opportunity for students to hear keynote talks from famous researchers and to interact with each other,鈥 says Bang, who has been a panelist and mentor at previous events. 鈥淲e try to get a mix of people from academia, as well as government and industry labs.

鈥淩esearchers are talking about the latest and greatest results in programming languages, implementation theory and design,鈥 he adds. 鈥淪tudents will get to connect with graduate school advisers and build community. It鈥檚 a very positive experience.鈥

The Singapore workshop will explore a new source of programming languages: artificial intelligence. 鈥淲e鈥檝e now got AI systems generating code,鈥 Bang says.

Bang teaches programming languages at Harvey Mudd. 鈥淚 try to demystify how programming works under the hood,鈥 he says. While new languages pop up frequently, the principles behind them are relatively stable. 鈥淚f you understand the principles, you can approach almost any language with confidence.鈥

Programming language dates back to the 19th century, when English mathematician Charles Babbage came up with the idea of a digital programmable computer. It was fellow English mathematician Ada Lovelace who considered potential applications of their so-called 鈥渁nalytical engine.鈥 The engine was never built and remained a concept.

鈥淪ome languages are popular and hang on, and there are lots of new languages that people are talking about, such as Rust,鈥 Bang says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really good for creating safe systems that don鈥檛 have security flaws. Basically, all modern technology uses some programming language.鈥

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