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Terascale spectral element dynamical core for atmospheric general circulation models
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Source Conference on High Performance Networking and Computing archive
Proceedings of the 2001 ACM/IEEE conference on Supercomputing (CDROM) table of contents
Denver, Colorado
Pages: 18 - 18  
Year of Publication: 2001
ISBN:1-58113-293-X
Authors
Richard D. Loft  National Center for Atmospheric Research
Stephen J. Thomas  National Center for Atmospheric Research
John M. Dennis  National Center for Atmospheric Research
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGARCH: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Architecture
IEEE-CS\DATC : IEEE Computer Society
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 1,   Downloads (12 Months): 16,   Citation Count: 11
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ABSTRACT

Climate modeling is a grand challenge problem where scientific progress is measured not in terms of the largest problem that can be solved but by the highest achievable integration rate. These models have been notably absent in previous Gordon Bell competitions due to their inability to scale to large processor counts. A scalable and efficient spectral element atmospheric model is presented. A new semi-implicit time stepping scheme accelerates the integration rate relative to an explicit model by a factor of two, achieving 130 years per day at T63L30 equivalent resolution. Execution rates are reported for the standard shallow water and Held-Suarez climate benchmarks on IBM SP clusters. The explicit T170 equivalent multi-layer shallow water model sustains 343 Gflops at NERSC, 206 Gflops at NPACI (SDSC) and 127 Gflops at NCAR. An explicit Held-Suarez integration sustains 369 Gflops on 128 16-way IBM nodes at NERSC.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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CITED BY  11

Collaborative Colleagues:
Richard D. Loft: colleagues
Stephen J. Thomas: colleagues
John M. Dennis: colleagues