| bio | website | calebwherry.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Clarksville, TN | |
| age | 24 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 10 months |
| seen | Mar 3 at 1:08 | |
| stats | profile views | 13 |
I am originally from a very small town in Tennessee by the name of Cumberland Furnace. I was raised on a farm and enjoyed going to the same high school that my father taught: Clarksville High School in Clarksville, TN. I started at Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, TN in 2006 as a double major in Music Performance and Computer Science. This slowly changed to a double major in Computer Science and Mathematics. At one point it had evolved to a triple major in CS, Math, and Physics but I ended up not pursing 2 of those fully.
I received my Bachelor of Science degree in Computer Science with minors in Physics and Mathematics from Austin Peay in 2011. While pursuing my undergraduate degree, I worked at many amazing labs and institutes where I did research in many different fields. I first was invited during the summer of 2008 to be a Research Assistant at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, CA. I worked on intrusion detection systems and finding anomalous behavior in logging systems. I was then accepted as a Research Assistant at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, VA for the fall of 2008. I went straight from LLNL to this position and worked on modeling polar stratospheric clouds using data collected from the CALIPSO satellite. Immediately following this position, I worked as a Research Assistant at the NASA/CalTech Jet Propulsion laboratory in Pasadena, CA for the Spring and Summer of 2009. I worked with work-renowned preplanetary nebulae expert Raghvendra Sahai. There we developed a streamlined software package that aided in processing Hubble images to identify properties of preplanetary nebulae. During the Summer of 2010 I worked as a Visiting Research Scholar with Michele Mosca and Frank Wilhelm at the Institute for Quantum Computing in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada on optimal control of quantum systems using genetic algorithms. During that same summer, I shortly worked with Aliocia Hamma of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics (also in Waterloo) on quantum speedups to inverse problems in General Relativity and Differential Geometry.
Currently I am a Research Engineer at Luna Innovations Incorporated in Roanoke, VA. I am also a graduate student in the Applied Mathematics department at the University of Washington. I plan to write my thesis on a topic in the quantum computing realm if all goes well.
My particular research interests lie in the interplay between CS, Math, and Physics and can be best applied to the fields of quantum computation and quantum information theory. I am planning to work in the particular field of Topological Quantum Computing someday.
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Stack Overflow | 10 rep | 4 |
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Mathematics | 1 rep | 1 |
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Theoretical Computer Science | 1 rep | 1 |
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Computational Science | 1 rep | 1 |