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Bradley Alpert

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Bradley Alpert

Fields
  
Computational science


Institutions
  
National Institute of Standards and Technology

Alma mater
  
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (B.S.), University of Chicago (S.M.), Yale University (Ph.D.)

Notable awards
  
Flemming Award, Bronze Medal of the U.S. Department of Commerce

Education
  
University of Chicago, Yale University, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

Bradley K. Alpert is a computational scientist at NIST. He is probably best known for co-developing fast spherical filters. His fast spherical filters were (and remain) critical in the construction of the most efficient three-dimensional fast multipole methods (FMMs) for solving the Helmholtz equation and Maxwell's equations. Other well-known work of his includes contributions to computational methods for time-domain wave propagation, quadratures for singular integrals, and multiwavelets.

Alpert was awarded the 2006 Flemming Award for his work on spherical filters and his other contributions to scientific computing. He was awarded a Bronze Medal from the U.S. Department of Commerce in 1997 for joint work on processing antenna measurements corrupted by errors in the positions of probes.

Alpert received his Ph.D from Yale University in 1990, under the supervision of Vladimir Rokhlin. Alpert worked as a casualty actuary early in his career, and was a Hans Lewy postdoctoral fellow at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and U.C. Berkeley.

References

Bradley Alpert Wikipedia