![]() ![]() Because of this, you can get more nuanced predictions. Race Simulator - the simulator is like the profile, but the simulation results only considers the 11 other horses in each race.Rather, it is the product of hundreds of thousands of Monte Carlo simulations predicting how your horse would have performed if it had entered every race over the last two weeks. Unlike stats that you may see on ZED.RUN or other secondary sites, the profile is NOT a compilation of your actual win loss records and profits. Horse Profile - the profile provides a bird’s eye view of a given horse and outlines its expected performance at every class, distance, and fee level.There are three key aspects of the ZSIM software, the horse profiler, race simulator, and the open races analyzer New documentation entry on using the custom race simulator to study Speed vs. New documentation entry on the ZSIM flame Icons: Predicting ZED Flames You may multi-select any number of filter combinations to view the combined totals. If the filters are all set to *, it will return all class, length, and fee levels. The actual paid race results, accessed from the icon on the profile page, now utilizes the profile filters. Only races you are already registered for will appear. A new filter for "Registered" has been added.The +ROI filter will now exclusively show -ROI races when toggled off.The Paid toggle will now exclusively show Free races when toggled off.Fixed bug with open races where it was only simming 11 horses for an open race.This should help clarify that even if a race has an open status, the horse may not be eligible to register. This appears when a given horse is already registered for a race within the same Paid or Free category. There is now a icon in the open races report. Use this to estimate your remaining stamina or exclude those that have already hit 12 races. This totals the number of races for each horse within the past 12 hours. There is now a "Fatigue" column and filter in the OpenRaces module. This will filter out any races where the number of registered horses than the selected value. There is now a "MinGates" filter in the OpenRaces module. This ranks horse by their simulated ROI in recent paid races and provides normalized speed, variance, and power ratings to assist in studying or comparing horses. I am slowly training myself to say “zee” instead of “zed”, though it may be a losing battle.A Beta version of the Simboard has been released. Outside of work, I am a stereotypical Canadian – a fan of ice hockey, particularly the greatest team to never win the Stanley Cup, the Vancouver Canucks. I also personally believe that a scientist must do more than use tools built by others, and I am very interested in developing advanced instrumentation for nuclear physics research, and am heavily involved with the GRETINA gamma-ray spectrometer development, the most powerful microscope we have today to study photon emissions from nuclei. I find it truly impressive how much we can learn in careful studies of the nucleus - we recently studied 40Mg, an isotope nearly twice as heavy as stable magnesium, and with only 5 nuclei we were able to find first evidence that this nucleus is shaped like an American football. ![]() I carry out experiments at facilities such as NSCL, RIBF in Japan, and TRIUMF in Vancouver, and am constantly staggered by the intrinsic beauty of the atomic nucleus. I focus on low-energy nuclear structure, and the fundamental question of how the structure of the most exotic isotopes we can produce in the laboratory differs from the isotopes found naturally on Earth. My work is in the research area of low-energy nuclear physics. I spent three years there, working on experiments at NSCL, at the Radioactive Isotope Beam Factory (RIBF) in Japan, and at the Berkeley 88” cyclotron, before moving back across the continent to join the faculty at Ohio University in January 2014. After obtaining my doctorate, I took a post-doctoral position back on the West Coast, a little further south at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Having worked at Canada’s nuclear science research facility, TRIUMF as an undergraduate, I was already hooked on low-energy nuclear science, and in the pursuit of a graduate program in nuclear chemistry I landed at Michigan State University and the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory (NSCL), where I obtained my Ph.D. I attended Simon Fraser University, in Vancouver, as an undergraduate in Chemistry, and obtained my B.Sc. I was born and raised in British Columbia, Canada, growing up just outside of Vancouver, on the West Coast. Institute of Nuclear and Particle Physics (INPP).Low-energy Nuclear Structure of Exotic Nuclei, Gamma-ray Spectroscopy and Gamma-ray Detection Arrays.in Nuclear Chemistry, Michigan State University (2010) Research ![]()
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