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members.yaml
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- name: Kenza Arraki
since: 2014
content: >
Kenza has been a yt project developer since 2013. Her main contributions
have been to the ART frontend and she is currently the ART code liason.
- name: Ricarda Beckmann
since: 2018
- name: Corentin Cadiou
since: 2017
content: >
Corentin has been a yt project developer since 2017. He has been involved in
maintaining and improving RAMSES' frontend.
- name: Brian Crosby
since: 2016
- name: Bili Dong
since: 2016
- name: Hilary Egan
since: 2014
content: >
Hilary began developing yt in 2013. She created and maintains the
absorption spectrum fitting tool. She has also been involved in developing
the new halo analysis framework.
- name: Nathan Goldbaum
since: 2014
content: >
Nathan has been involved in yt development since 2011. He has been involved
in writing and maintaining yt's plotting functionality, the FLASH, Enzo,
and SPH frontends, and yt's unit system.
- name: Cameron Hummels
since: 2014
content: >
Cameron began work on the yt project in 2010. The focus of his code
contributions have been on halo finding, tracking, and merger trees; volume
rendering and the camera interface, synthetic spectral generation, and the
graphical user interface for yt, Reason, but he has experience making
modifications in many corners of the codebase. Cameron has organized and
written a large fraction of the yt documentation and has contributed
numerous useful recipes to the cookbook. As the informal documentation
czar, he tries very hard to assure newly developed functionality is
accessible to the entire userbase. He is active in yt project organization
and planning.
- name: Suoqing Ji
since: 2014
content: >
Suoqing has benefited a lot from friendly yt community. The 2012 user
workshop made him stick to yt for analyzing his FLASH datasets, and the
2014 development workshop made him into a developer. He has contributed to
improvement of plotting functionality and extension of volume rendering.
Suoqing started his PhD at UC Santa Babara in 2013, where he also
collaborates with local researchers to incorporate yt into the AlloSphere
for real-time analysis of astrophysical datasets with stereoscopic 3-D
virtual reality.
- name: Allyson Julian
since: 2016
- name: Ben Keller
since: 2014
content: >
Ben Keller is the current Tipsy frontent liason. He started his PhD at
McMaster University in 2011, and uses yt to analyze simulations generated
using the Gasoline and ChaNGa SPH codes.
- name: Ashley Kelly
since: 2018
- name: Kacper Kowalik
since: 2014
content: >
Kacper has been a developer since 2011. He has made contributions to, and
is actively maintaining Grid Data Format frontend. He is also taking care
of continuous integration infrastructure and documentation deployment.
- name: Sam Leitner
since: 2014
- name: Alex Lindsay
since: 2016
content: >
Alex is focused on expanding yt support of unstructured mesh visualization,
particularly for Exodus datasets which are the default file output of the
finite element code MOOSE.
- name: Chris Malone
since: 2014
content: >
Chris began dabbling with yt in 2011, adding support for the BoxLib-based
code, Maestro. Since then, he has helped work with other BoxLib-based
codes, and is currently the BoxLib frontend liason. He's currently a
postdoc at Los Alamos National Lab, where he is trying to pull in more yt
users for lab-related codes.
- name: Madicken Munk
since: 2018
content: >
Madicken has been working with yt since 2017. Her contributions to yt have
included adding support for georeferenced data and building the frontend
the discrete ordinates code Denovo. Madicken is interested in building
further support for nuclear engineering simulation codes.
- name: Andrew Myers
since: 2014
content: >
Andrew made his first commit to the code in 2011. He helped develop, and
currently maintains, the Orion and Chombo frontends. He also wrote the
RADMC-3D export module and has contributed many bugfixes. He is currently
working on extending yt's tools for analyzing and visualizing particle
datasets.
- name: Jill Naiman
since: 2014
- name: Jeff Oishi
since: 2014
- name: Brian O'Shea
since: 2014
- name: Douglas Rudd
since: 2014
content: >
Doug is a Scientific Computing Consultant at the Research Computing Center
at the University of Chicago. In a past life he developed the distributed
version of ART and in 2012 began working on a yt frontend for that code. He
currently acts as the liaison to the ARTIO frontend and works on
infrastructure projects like periodicity and selectors.
- name: Anthony Scopatz
since: 2014
- name: Abhishek Singh
since: 2018
- name: Sam Skillman
since: 2014
- name: Stephen Skory
since: 2014
- name: Britton Smith
since: 2014
content: >
Britton has been a developer for the yt project since 2008 and has made
contributions to most areas of the code. He has also been active in
project organization and helped to establish the current system of
governance for yt.
- name: Casey Stark
since: 2014
- name: Matthew Turk
since: 2014
content: >
Matt has been a developer since 2006, and has been involved with many
different aspects of yt including frontends, infrastructure, visualization,
and parallelism. He's been involved in the organization and community
growth of yt.
- name: John Wise
since: 2014
content: >
John has been a developer since 2007 when Matt Turk and he were graduate
students in the same group. He is the main developer of the eps_writer
extension. He has contributed many minor bugfixes and improvements to
various parts of yt, such as the merger tree, Rockstar interface, and the
Enzo frontend. He is an assistant professor at Georgia Tech, where he
enjoys showing off yt's usefulness to his research group and students in
his upper-level classes.
- name: Michael Zingale
since: 2014
content: >
Mike saw the light of yt late in the game, when he became too frustrated
with other visualization offerings. He enjoys de-cosmologicalizing the
code and hacking where he can to make yt better.
- name: John ZuHone
since: 2014
content: >
John has been a developer since 2010, and has been involved with developing
the FLASH, Athena, and FITS frontends, as well as a number of analysis
modules pertaining to simulated observations.