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Tony Hey

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Professor Tony Hey BA (Hons), DPhil (Oxon), FBCS, FIET, CEng, FREng, FPinst, CITP, SMIEEE, FAAAS, FACM
Chief Data Scientist

I moved to STFC as a Chief Data Scientist in 2015. I originally trained as a theoretical physicist at Oxford University, at both undergraduate and at postgraduate level. I received my doctorate in theoretical particle physics in 1970 and spent two years as a post-doctoral fellow at Caltech in California and then a further two years at CERN in Geneva.

I began my university career in 1974 in the Physics Department of the University of Southampton in the UK. In 1986 I moved to a new, combined Electronics and Computer Science Department at Southampton. The Department has a world-renowned Opto-electronics Research Centre and they were one of the original three research groups pioneering the use of optical fibers for telecommunications.

My parallel computing research group was one of the leading hardware and software groups worldwide. My group were instrumental in designing novel, transputer-based parallel computing systems, developing parallel benchmarks for distributed memory machines, and parallelizing a wide range of applications. I was co-author of the first draft of the MPI message-passing standard.

I spent sabbaticals at MIT, Caltech, IBM Research and Los Alamos National Laboratory. I am the author of over 150 research papers in particle physics, computer science and e-Science. I also am the co-author of a best-selling graduate text on ‘Gauge Theories in Particle Physics’ and popular science books on quantum mechanics and relativity. My latest ‘popular’ science book, ‘The Computing Universe: A Journey through a Revolution’, was published in January 2015 and is an accessible overview of the both the fundamentals and the applications of computer science.

Prior to that I held various positions including:

I also hold a number of current appointments including

Selected Publications

eScience:

Computer Science

MPI Standard

Lectures on computation of Physics Nobel Prize winner, Richard Feynman

Public Understanding of Science