Andrew Hornig
Lead Data Scientist at Kimetrica International Limited- Claim this Profile
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Bio
Experience
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Kimetrica
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United States
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IT Services and IT Consulting
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1 - 100 Employee
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Lead Data Scientist
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Sep 2018 - Present
Greater Denver Area
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Los Alamos National Laboratory
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United States
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Research Services
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700 & Above Employee
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Director’s Postdoctoral Fellow
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Sep 2013 - Present
• Published research papers and gave numerous talks and seminars at workshops, conferences, and other institutions. • Continued to develop and apply novel analytical tools to better understand collider events, including the creation of a new tower of effective field theories that bridged some long-standing gaps in our knowledge of quantum chromodynamics at particle colliders. • Mentored several graduate students in performing research and writing papers, in projects ranging from applying… Show more • Published research papers and gave numerous talks and seminars at workshops, conferences, and other institutions. • Continued to develop and apply novel analytical tools to better understand collider events, including the creation of a new tower of effective field theories that bridged some long-standing gaps in our knowledge of quantum chromodynamics at particle colliders. • Mentored several graduate students in performing research and writing papers, in projects ranging from applying analytical tools to reach the precision frontier of collider predictions, to both using and improving existing event generators in understanding heavy meson production. Show less
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University of Washington
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United States
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Higher Education
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700 & Above Employee
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Postdoctoral Researcher
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Sep 2010 - Aug 2013
• Published research papers and gave numerous talks and seminars at workshops, conferences, and other institutions. • Continued to develop and apply novel analytical tools to better understand collider events, including the creation of a novel algorithm based on the principle of quantum uncertainty to identify a special class of events, which has since been used by the ATLAS and CMS collaborations at the LHC. • Continued work on a large coding collaboration (initiated as a graduate… Show more • Published research papers and gave numerous talks and seminars at workshops, conferences, and other institutions. • Continued to develop and apply novel analytical tools to better understand collider events, including the creation of a novel algorithm based on the principle of quantum uncertainty to identify a special class of events, which has since been used by the ATLAS and CMS collaborations at the LHC. • Continued work on a large coding collaboration (initiated as a graduate student) to develop a new Monte Carlo event generator. Show less
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University of California, Berkeley
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United States
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Higher Education
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700 & Above Employee
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Research and Teaching Assistant
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Aug 2004 - Sep 2010
• Studied theoretical particle physics and conducted original research; published research papers and gave talks and seminars at workshops, conferences, and other institutions. • Teaching assistant for introductory undergraduate physics courses (including head TA), advanced undergraduate quantum mechanics, and graduate quantum field theory. • Developed and applied novel analytical tools using effective field theory in multiple contexts to better understand events produced at colliders… Show more • Studied theoretical particle physics and conducted original research; published research papers and gave talks and seminars at workshops, conferences, and other institutions. • Teaching assistant for introductory undergraduate physics courses (including head TA), advanced undergraduate quantum mechanics, and graduate quantum field theory. • Developed and applied novel analytical tools using effective field theory in multiple contexts to better understand events produced at colliders such as the Large Hadron Collider. • Began work on a large coding collaboration to develop a new Monte Carlo event generator, based primarily in C++, as a complementary approach to understanding collider events. LHC Theory Initiative Graduate Fellow, 2009 Show less
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The University of Texas at Austin
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United States
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Higher Education
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700 & Above Employee
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Undergraduate Research Assistant
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Sep 2002 - May 2004
• Research assistant in a quantum dot optics lab, Fall 2002 - Spring 2003 • Research project (in Wurzburg, Germany) on time-of-flight measurements, Summer 2003 • Senior thesis on galaxy formation simulations, Spring 2004
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Education
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University of California, Berkeley
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Physics -
University of California, Berkeley
Master’s Degree, Physics -
The University of Texas at Austin
Bachelor’s Degree, Physics -
The University of Texas at Austin
Bachelor’s Degree, Mathematics