Accelerated Prediction of the Polar Ice and Global Ocean (APPIGO)

Abstract

Arctic change and reductions in sea ice are impacting Arctic communities and are leading to increased commercial activity in the Arctic. Improved forecasts will be needed at a variety of timescales to support Arctic operations and infrastructure decisions. Increased resolution and ensemble forecasts will require significant computational capability. At the same time, high performance computing architectures are changing in response to power and cooling limitations, adding more cores per chip and using Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) as computational accelerators. This project will improve Arctic forecast capability by modifying component models to better utilize new computational architectures. Specifically, we will focus on the Los Alamos Sea Ice Model (CICE), the HYbridCoordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) and the Wavewatch III models and optimize each model on both GPU-accelerated and MIC-based architectures. These codes form the ocean and sea ice components of the Navys Arctic Cap Nowcast/Forecast System (ACNFS) and the Navy Global Ocean ForecastingSystem (GOFS), with the latter scheduled to include a coupled Wavewatch III by 2016. This work will contribute to improved Arctic forecasts and the Arctic ice prediction demonstration project for the Earth System Prediction Capability (ESPC).

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 30, 2015
Accession Number
AD1014342

Entities

People

  • Eric Chassignet

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Arctic Regions
  • Climate Change
  • Compilers
  • Computer Architecture
  • Computer Programming
  • Computers
  • Computing System Architectures
  • Demographic Cohorts
  • Graphics
  • Graphics Processing Unit
  • High Performance Computing
  • Military Research
  • Oceans
  • Regions
  • Sea Ice
  • Simulations
  • Standards

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Ocean-Atmosphere Mesoscale Modeling, Data Assimilation, and Flux Boundary Layers
  • Parallel and Distributed Computing.
  • Polar and Arctic Studies