Title :
Climate Computing: The State of Play
Author_Institution :
Cooperative Inst. for Climate Sci., Princeton Univ., Princeton, NJ, USA
Abstract :
Climate models represent a large variety of processes on different time and space scales and canonical example of multiphysics, multiscale modeling. In addition, the system is physically characterized by sensitive dependence on initial conditions and natural stochastic variability, with very long integrations needed to extract signals of climate change. Weak scaling, I/O, and memory-bound multiphysics codes present particular challenges to computational performance. The author presents trends in climate science that are driving models toward higher resolution, greater complexity, and larger ensembles, all of which present computing challenges. He also discusses the prospects for adapting these models to novel hardware and programming models.
Keywords :
climatology; geophysics computing; climate computing; climate models; climate science; Atmospheric modeling; Biological system modeling; Computational modeling; Data models; Earth; Meteorology; Uncertainty; Earth system science; HPC; big data; climate science; high-performance computing; scientific computing;
Journal_Title :
Computing in Science Engineering
DOI :
10.1109/MCSE.2015.109