Message boards : climateprediction.net Science : Which experiment is this work unit for?
Message board moderation
Author | Message |
---|---|
Send message Joined: 30 Jan 14 Posts: 70 Credit: 60,900 RAC: 0 |
I'm starting a new thread here to give you all some more information on work unit batches as they get released, to link them back to the science experiment they are for. Hannah Rowlands -- No longer Communications Officer for climateprediction.net, as of October 2015 |
Send message Joined: 30 Jan 14 Posts: 70 Credit: 60,900 RAC: 0 |
There's currently a big batch that was released a few days ago for Weather At Home Australia New Zealand region (hadam3p_anz) (Mac and Windows only). This is a continuation of an existing project. The researcher on this project, Mitchell Black, says: "We have just released some more work units for the ANZ experiment looking at ENSO (El Nino Southern Oscillation) and recent extreme weather in Australia." Thanks for crunching! Best wishes, Hannah Hannah Rowlands -- No longer Communications Officer for climateprediction.net, as of October 2015 |
Send message Joined: 30 Jan 14 Posts: 70 Credit: 60,900 RAC: 0 |
A new batch of hadcm3s models has been released for the RAPID ChAAOS experiment - you can read more about the experiment here: http://www.climateprediction.net/projects/rapid-chaaos/ Sarah Sparrow, the lead scientist on the project, says: "This batch is the 3rd submission for the RAPID_ChAAOS experiment covering the years 1984-1986, 1994-1996 and 2004-2006. For this batch the model configurations sent out have been further filtered to include only the top 15% (ranked by SST (sea surface temperature) and upper ocean heat content) from all the previous RAPID-ChAAOS simulations for 1980-1983, 1990-1993 and 2000-2003." Thanks as always for crunching these models for us! Cheers, Hannah Hannah Rowlands -- No longer Communications Officer for climateprediction.net, as of October 2015 |
Send message Joined: 30 Jan 14 Posts: 70 Credit: 60,900 RAC: 0 |
So, there's a new batch released running the new weather@home2 application. This batch is for the MaRIUS project, lead scientist Dr Beno�t Guillod says: "What are the risks and uncertainties of droughts in the UK and Europe? We�ve just launched the first generation of 1900-2010 weather@home2 runs for MaRIUS, with improved land surface models and at a 25km resolution over Europe" Many thanks for running these models! Cheers, Hannah Hannah Rowlands -- No longer Communications Officer for climateprediction.net, as of October 2015 |
Send message Joined: 23 Jul 15 Posts: 1 Credit: 263,845 RAC: 0 |
I saw this application "Weather At Home 2 (wah2) v8.12" running on my computer and it's almost done now. Does anyone know what project this application is contributing to? I looked the Weather@home Projects list and didn't see that one listed. (I hope I phrased that question right. I'm not well spoken, lol) |
Send message Joined: 7 Aug 04 Posts: 2187 Credit: 64,822,615 RAC: 5,275 |
Trevor, If you click on the task ID link, it gives a name for the task that includes SAS. This is the South Asia region of the world weather attribution project. For all those wah2 apps, the regions where the study is being done is in the task name: weather@home regions: AFR50 Africa 50 km regional resolution ANZ50 Australia/New Zealand 50 km regional resolution EAS50 East Asia 50 km regional resolution EU25 (as MaRIUS) European region 25 km regional resolution EU50r (rotated) European region 50 km regional resolution MEX50 Mexico region 50 km regional resolution MEX25 Mexico region 25 km regional resolution PNW25 Pacific NorthWest region 25 km regional resolution SAS50 South Asia region 50 km regional resolution The World Weather Attribution Project info can be found here: http://www.climateprediction.net/weatherathome/world-weather-attribution/ Some info on the regions can be found here: http://www.climateprediction.net/weatherathome/regions/ Regions can be seen here:https://trello-attachments.s3.amazonaws.com/56cae56223d85cfc580edb3a/800x600/2f5a8a6fdbb6232aa8401afe80fcf229/region_plot.png |
©2024 cpdn.org