Research Prime
Computational Science→Resources: Open Admissions, Scholarships & Awards
Open Admissions


Scholarships & Awards for Computational Science*
  • SIAM/ACM Prize in Computational Science and Engineering, Philadelphia, PA, USA
    SIAM awards the prize with the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) for outstanding contributions to the development and use of mathematical and computational tools and methods for the solution of science and engineering problems.

  • Luis W. Alvarez Fellowship in Computing Sciences, Berkeley, CA, United States
    The Luis W. Alvarez Fellowship provides recent graduates (within the past three years) opportunities to work on some of the most important research challenges in computing sciences — from the architecture and software of next-generation high performance computing systems and networks, to mathematical modeling, algorithms, and applications of advanced computing, material science, biology, astronomy, climate change, and other scientific domains.

  • Admiral Grace Hopper Fellowship in Computing, Berkeley, CA, United States
    The Admiral Grace Hopper Fellowship was established in 2015 with the goal of developing young computational scientists to make outstanding contributions in the area of HPC applications.

  • DOE Computational Science Graduate Fellowship, Ames, Iowa, United States
    Established in 1991, the Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship (DOE CSGF) provides outstanding benefits and opportunities to students pursuing doctoral degrees in fields that use high-performance computing to solve complex science and engineering problems.

  • NSF Fellowships for Transformative Computational Science using CyberInfrastructure (CI TraCS), Alexandria, Virginia, USA
    The overarching goal of the NSF Fellowships for Transformative Computational Science using Cyberinfrastructure (CI TRaCS) program is to support outstanding scientists and engineers who have recently completed doctoral studies and are interested in pursuing postdoctoral activities in computational science, and thereby nurturing the future leaders in this emerging and important multidisciplinary field. Computational research and education activities that are cyberinfrastrucure-based and cross disciplinary boundaries are a key focus of this program.

  • Oden Institute Carey Scholarship, Austin, Texas, USA
    To honor the important work of Professor Graham F. Carey in the computational sciences, the Oden Institute has established the Graham F. Carey Computational Science Scholarship. The $2,500 scholarship is awarded annually and gives preference to participants in the Undergraduate CSE Certificate Program and to UT students in the Moncrief Summer Internship Program.

  • John von Neumann Fellowship, Alexandria, Virginia, USA
    This is one of Sandia's most prestigious postdoctoral fellowships with funding from the Applied Mathematics Research Program in the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research and Sandia's Lab Directed Research and Development Program. We seek applicants with interests in applying computational methods to scientific and engineering applications, including additive manufacturing, circuit simulation, computational fluid dynamics (CFD), computational solid mechanics, cyber security, earth systems, electrical systems, hyperspectral imaging, magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD), micro-electro mechanical systems (MEMS), material design, molecular dynamics, power grid, sensor data fusion, shock physics, signal processing, and turbulence modeling.


Subscribe for receiving latest updates in Computational Sciences