Wei Cai

Wei Cai is a Chinese Associate Professor of mechanical engineering at Stanford University.

Early life and career

In 1995, Cai received his Bachelor of Science degree in optoelectronics from Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Hubei province, China. In 2001, Cai received a Ph.D. in nuclear engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology[1] and immediately after it became a postdoc at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory where he remained until 2004.[2] In July 2004, Cai became an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Stanford University, and in September 2011 was promoted to associate professor.[1]

Memberships

Wei Cai is a member of numerous societies including: American Nuclear Society, American Physical Society,[1] Materials Research Society,[3] Alpha Nu Sigma Honor Society of American Nuclear Society and Sigma Xi.[1]

Works

  • 2006 Computer Simulations of Dislocations
  • 2016 Imperfections in Crystalline Solids
gollark: I can't actually buy 10 trillion multi-terabyte hard disks and ship them to every user, you see.
gollark: I have enough storage capacity available to hold maybe 1e13 bits at home.
gollark: Even if I'm off by 6 OOM, 3.7e26 bits is *not tractable*.
gollark: The board state can be encoded in 101.4 bits. The optimal position for that board state can be encoded in a further 6 bits. This gives us 107.4 bits per state.
gollark: Interesting.

References

  1. "Curriculum Vitae - Wei Cai". Stanford University. Retrieved 2019-02-04.
  2. "Wei Cai". Materials Science and Engineering. 2017-06-10. Retrieved 2019-02-04.
  3. "2017 MRS Member Benefits & Society Activities" (PDF). Materials Research Society. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)


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