Autor: |
Washington, W., Gent, P., Hack, J., Kiehl, J., Meehl, G., Rasch, P., Semtner, B., Weatherly, J. |
Přispěvatelé: |
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.), Meteorology |
Rok vydání: |
2002 |
Popis: |
This essay is from: NERSC Annual Report 2002' edited by John Hules Publication Date: 01-31-2003 Abstract: The National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) is the primary computational resource for scientific research funded by the DOE Office of Science. The Annual Report for FY2002 includes a summary of recent computational science conducted on NERSC systems (with abstracts of significant and representative Scientists in the DOE Climate Change Prediction Program recently completed a 1,000-year run of a powerful new climate system model on a supercomputer at NERSC. The millennium long simulation of the new Community Climate System Model (CCSM2) ran for more than 200 uninterrupted days on the IBM SP supercomputer at NERSC. The lengthy run served as a kind of “shakedown cruise” for the new version of the climate model and demonstrated that its variability is stable, even when run for century-after-century simulations. The 1,000-year CCSM2 run had a total drift of just one-half of one degree Celsius, compared to older versions with two to three times as much variance. Department of Energy |
Databáze: |
OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |
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