Danny Rehn
Scientist, Computational Physics, Los Alamos National Laboratory
email: rehnd@lanl.gov
phone: 505-667-0687
Education
- Ph.D. Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University (2018)
- M.S. Computational and Mathematical Engineering, Stanford
University (2015)
- B.S. Engineering Physics, University of Colorado at Boulder (2012)
Research
I primarily work in computational materials science, focusing on
the development of density functional theory (DFT) software and
applications of DFT. I am currently working on DFT based on the
Dirac equation. I also use methods in time-dependent DFT and
work on 2D materials.
LANL profile
See this page
Publications
See full list
on Google Scholar or
ResearchGate.
Tutorials
I have several tutorials at
this link.
Teaching
I was a Teaching Assistant for the following courses at Stanford:
- CME 100 - Vector Calculus for Engineers (Fall 2013, 206 students; Fall 2014, 250 students)
- CME 102 - Ordinary Differential Equations for Engineers (Winter 2014, 90 students)
- CME 104 - Linear Algebra and PDEs for Engineers (Spring 2014, 80 students)
- CME 106 - Probability and Statistics for Engineers (Sum 2014, 16 students; Winter 2015, 180 students)
- MATSCI 331 - Atom-based computational methods for materials
- MATSCI 175 - Nanoscale Materials Physics Computation Laboratory
I was also a Learning Assistant at the University of Colorado, Boulder in several physics courses:
- PHYS 2130 - Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (Fall 2010)
- PHYS 2210 - Classical Mechanics and Math Methods I (Spring 2011)
- PHYS 1120 - General Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism (Summer 2011)
- PHYS 3220 - Quantum Mechanics and Atomic Physics I (Fall 2011)
- PHYS 3320 - Electromagnetism II (Fall 2011)