Earth Simulator Now Predicting Hurricanes? 167
GeoGreg writes "The BBC is reporting that the Japanese Earth Simulator supercomputer is producing results showing that it is possible to model climate down to the level of severe weather events such as hurricanes. This computer has been discussed on Slashdot previously, and it sounds like at least some of the hype around this beastie was justified."
Butterfly (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Butterfly (Score:2, Funny)
It's not that finely-grained of a model yet, but the Japanese expect to influence the weather within the next few years by strategically placing Mothra....
Re:Butterfly (Score:2, Funny)
Heisenberg - why do you taunt us so?
Re:Butterfly (Score:2)
Hey, moronic moderators!
This is not Funny, but Insightful.
Cheers,
Re:Butterfly (Score:1, Funny)
-George W.
Re:Butterfly (Score:1)
-Bart Simpson-
MSN (Score:2)
Try telling that to Microsoft, whose mascot for its MSN online service is a butterfly [msn.com].
Re:Butterfly (Score:1, Funny)
Model (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, you can model it, but how accurate is the model? I can model a cow as a sphere, but I haven't told you if that is appropriate for what I need.
Re:Model (Score:3, Funny)
Next step: Breed spherical cow.
Re:Model (Score:2)
Make sure it is of "Uniform Density" too...
Re:Model (Score:2)
Make sure it is of "Uniform Density" too...
Don't forget uniform conductance, resistivity, material strength... oh and it's completely frictionless in an atmosphere-less environment. Here's to a more uniform universe!
Re:Model (Score:5, Insightful)
This thing is easy enough to test. Plug in a the variables today... and see if it predicts the weather currently tomorrow, or the next big hurricane, or whatever. They haven't published this type of research yet... why not?
Pretty graphics and powerful computers do not insure success.
Show me the data.
Davak
Re:Model (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Model (Score:2, Informative)
NCEP Skill Scores [noaa.gov]
If this doesn't convince you that much research is currently being done to improve weather prediciton, here is the fields most recent effort, the WRF model, a collaborative Operational/Research model.
WRF Model [wrf-model.org]
Keep in mind, the model can only resolve a solution near that of the actual resolution of the input d
Re:Model (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Model (Score:4, Informative)
dictionary.com gives me...
Insure - To make sure, certain, or secure. (See Usage Note at assure)
Ensure - To make sure or certain; insure: Our precautions ensured our safety. (See Usage Note at assure.)
I'm still not sure who is correct here. Please don't make me diagram the sentence.
Davak
Re:Model (Score:2)
Re:Model (Score:2)
"Although ensure and insure are generally interchangeable, only insure is now widely used in American English in the commercial sense of "to guarantee persons or property against risk."
In the States, insure has started to acquire the exclusive meaning of "to guarantee persons or property," while ensure has retained the more general meaning. So, in contemporary American usage, ensure is general, and insure has the specific meaning asso
Re:Model (Score:2)
My mom assures me that the cookies will not burn.
I can ensure the cookies will not burn by checking them every couple minutes.
The state
Re:Model (Score:2)
assure, ensure, insure (Score:2)
Oh, cookies! I am the Cookie Monster...
My mom assures me that the cookies will not burn.
I can ensure the cookies will not burn by checking them every couple minutes.
Those are good. Here's a better one for insure
My cookies are insured against burning: if they are burned, mom promises to give me $5.00 so I can buy some instead.
An important difference between insure and the other two is that when something is insured, there is no guarantee that it will work; there is instead a promise that if it fai
Re:assure, ensure, insure (Score:2)
But do you feel assured that this is the case? *ducks*
ensure is to assure as effect is to affect (Score:2)
'Affect' means you perform an action 'at' or 'towards' something that already exists. 'Effect' means 'to bring about' (you make something 'out' of thin air).
If you want something to happen, you 'ensure' it by doing something to bring it 'about'. If you want to give enhancement 'to' something that already exists, you 'assure' it.
This is pure speculation, but p
Re:Model (Score:4, Informative)
First of all, that is already happening with current weather models...those are the ones that predict hurricane paths and such. There were already predictions that this would be an unusually heavy hurricane season before it started - those were due to climate models that showed the ocean area responsible would be warmer than normal.
Predicting where hurricanes will appear and where they will go ahead of time (that is without looking at the current weather patterns while it is happening) involves that pesky chaos thing and good luck with that.
Perhaps what the person was trying to say is that this is the first time researchers have been able to run 10 km. (or 5, or 1) resolution models on a global scale all at once - and that is quite an achievement if so.
BTW, the point of all this is not to predict individual hurricanes or tracks. It is primarily to identify long-term climate trends. From the article:
"This means that we potentially have the capability to predict whether storms like Hurricane Isabel will be on the increase in future." - Professor Julia Slingo. (Hmmm, I guess she's from Soviet Russia;)
Re:Model (Score:2)
But remember that the same models predicted a heavy hurricane season last year and it didn't happen. Weather predictions are still only a little better at this point than a man in a loincloth shaking a bone at the moon. It's not enough for them to predict right once. I want to see a good record of accu
Pish posh. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pish posh. (Score:2)
Re:Pish posh. (Score:2)
Rus
Re:Pish posh. (Score:2)
Almost every day we have a tour/orientation, the weather is great. You can plan picnics based on when these events are and you won't be disappointed. If anyone knows what the weather in Rochester, NY is like, they'll appreciate this.
Who needs a supercomputer? (Score:2)
Oh, wait, it seems we need the supercomputer to work out where to put the butterfly.
Re:Who needs a supercomputer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who needs a supercomputer? (Score:3, Informative)
small differences in the initial data manifest themselves as large-scale phenomena down the road.
A good point to emphasize when people are blindly clamoring for more computer power.
Lyapunov exponents [mpipks-dresden.mpg.de] for portions of phase space for a nonlinear system will cause this divergence.
So, yes, no matter how many bits of floating point mantissa you carry, or how precise your measure your initial conditions, exp(at) will inevitably grow if a > 0.
And, just in case anyone's proud of their accurate code and pr
Re:Who needs a supercomputer? (Score:2)
--Nonono, you have it all wrong - what we need to do is find that butterfly and NEUTRALIZE IT. *snap* "THAT for your blasted hurricane, Foolio!"
Hurricanes and Tornadoes are man-made. (Score:2, Interesting)
Weather control (Score:2)
Peacetime use of hurricane control might be to keep the hurricanes over the oceans, without disrupting the overall thermal equilibrium of the planet.
Being able to measure and predict is the first step to being able to influence nature in planned ways.
Re:Pish posh. (Score:2)
Well tornadoes only in this version, and their accuarcy was always a little off, but the source code is available.
10km resolution (Score:4, Insightful)
Think of the variation between the state of air at sea level and then at the ceiling of a 10km cell... that's some severe approximation.
Re:10km resolution (Score:5, Interesting)
Define "the most general of weather trends". Currently, at least for here in the US, the model of choice (something always of debate) is the Eta [noaa.gov] that typically is run at 44km (they have much higher resolutions, but those aren't as readily available). Believe it or not, this model has been great at forecasting for frontal based weather (like thunderstorms along a cold front) and winter storm systems (it is able to place the areas of heavy snow by county) Depending on how close the model run is the the event, the placement of this information is usually pretty close.
That isn't to say it is perfect. As you could imagine for a grid that size, the model will typically miss popcorn type showers and thunderstorms. Also, if you do any severe weather forecasting, you will miss the small scale features like a tornado or such.
They have something called the RUC [noaa.gov] which is run at 20km. I am not as familiar with this model, but a person I work with has used it to do tornado forecasting (check out the historic data towards the bottom) [wxcaster.com] and has had incredible results.
Re:10km resolution (Score:4, Informative)
Therefore 10 cubic kilometers is the volume of 10 such cubes. For example, a volume of 10km*1km*1km is 10 cubic kilometers.
If you want a cube of 10 cubic kilometers, it would have a height (and width and depth, of course) of [cubic-root of 10]km, which is about 2.15km.
Re:10km resolution (Score:4, Informative)
Re:10km resolution (Score:4, Insightful)
Think of the variation between the state of air at sea level and then at the ceiling of a 10km cell... that's some severe approximation.
It would be a horrifically bad approximation, yes, but you cannot compare horizontal resolutions and scales with vertical ones. The temperature variation over the lowest 10 km is about 70C (130F). At that height, pressure and density are both about 20% of their sea level values. You'll never find that kind of variation in the horizontal over any distance, never mind adjacent 10 km grid squares.
There is much that cannot be resolved at 10 km, but at this point in time 10 km horizontal resolution on a global scale is fantastic.
Earthsim do cool things (Score:5, Informative)
The conclusion was basically that Japan would be f***'ed if such was to happen, but that's rant for another day.
So, earthsimulator simulates a lot of things. I am surprised that they don't model nuclear blasts on them, because it certainly CAN. Or at least we just don't know about it.
One thing is for sure, though - I will attest that NEC definitely made a bundle over this =)
btw, for ppl who are in japan, you can schedule tours to the place. I havn't tried yet, but in case anyone is interested... (now that I think about it, wasn't there a story about this a while back?) but here is a link just for fun: visitor information [jamstec.go.jp].
and if you are brave enough for the same page in japanese, click here [jamstec.go.jp]. (The japanese page has a japanese map, which shows station names in kanji. I always found kanji station names to be more help, but that might be just me...
Re:Earthsim do cool things (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Earthsim do cool things (Score:2)
Thanks for the link. I'd mod you up if I had points.
Did you see this one? 13. Global elastic response simulation. Uh, so they're going to see how high the Earth bounces if dropped from a 10-story window? ;-)
Global elastic response simulation. (Score:2)
hmm... i have no life (Score:2)
ok. i have no life: but here is a quick calculation:
1.2billion people
avg 70kg
jump 20cm
E = gmh = 9.81 m/s^2 * 0.2 m * 70 kg * 1.2E9
= 164.81GJ
This is compared to a megaton yield, which is
2,977,789,639,020,840Joules (i.e. 2977.8GJ).
In another words, the said scenario would cause an energy roughly equivalent of about 55 kilotons spreadout through China; as a comparison, LittleBoy was like 13.4 kilotons.
So, I guess if they brought everybody to
Re:hmm... i have no life (Score:2)
Mmm.... Mechanical Resonance...
Re:Earthsim do cool things (Score:5, Funny)
The one in Los Alamos does that, while the Japanese one predicts weather. It's something of a common joke that the japanese are using world's fastest supercomputer to improve the environment, while the americans are using the world's second-fastest supercomputer to design bigger nuclear weapons.
Re:Earthsim do cool things (Score:2)
Well they both do a good bit more than that... the project list for the Japanese one is really quite nifty (and I'm sure I could find an equivalent list for Los Alamos if I was sufficiently interested), and includes non-weather related research as well. Including nuclear energy research (not weapons related, but medical/energy/manufacturing).
As for Los Alamos -- the primary reason isn't to build bigger weapons, but to ensure that th
Re:Earthsim do cool things (Score:2)
Yeah, but what the jokers don't tell you is that on nights and weekends, the Japanese supercomputer is used to model giant fighting robots piloted by school children, one of whom is only doing it because his dad runs the project.
It's quite chilling when you consider that it's well known
Re:Earthsim do cool things (Score:2)
Re:Earthsim do cool things (Score:2)
Re:Earthsim do cool things (Score:2)
To be slightly pedantic, earthquake waves are not shock waves. They are perfectly ordinary elastic waves. A shock is produced by a body moving through a medium faster than the speed of sound in that medium (e.g., a sonic boom). That doesn't mean that one couldn't be shocked by earthquakes, though ;)
Deja Vu (Score:1)
Output (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Output (Score:5, Informative)
There is a technique called ensemble forecasting, whereby you run multiple instances of the model with slightly disturbed initial conditions and/or slightly tweaked model parameters. You can then examine the statistics of the ensemble to try and obtain information a deterministic forecast might not be able to give you.
Note that the goal in this particular case is not hurricane forecasting as such. The newsworthy information is that this is the first time that a climate model can be run at a resolution high enough that hurricanes become possible within the simulation. Short term models used for the daily weather forecast do this reasonably well already.
Ensemble forecasting is great for horse-racing (Score:2)
Of course, those predic
Re:Ensemble forecasting is great for horse-racing (Score:2)
Ensembles and chaos theory (Score:2)
Suppose you run an ensemble and discover that a tiny change in inputs causes a big change in outputs. Then you know that you're on a cusp, and the uncertainties in your input data will probably make your forecast diverge from the actual weather.
Other times you'll discover that all the outputs are pretty similar. Then you know that you're in a stable and predictable part of the state space. Then you can publish an extreme long range forecast without worryi
Re:Output (Score:4, Interesting)
I would hope so. The National Center for Environmental Predictions (NCEP [noaa.gov]) does this now with their model called the Global Forecast System (GFS [noaa.gov]) that goes out to 384 hours or 16 days. With this model, they do something called ensemble forecasts where they rerun the model another ten times at a reduced resolution from the master run with perturbations added to each. Then they compare the results and will, on some of the graphics, use all ten to perform a type of averaging to remove the really bogus forecasts.
My experience has been if you are doing any type of long range forecasting, the ensemble method is the way to go. I am not saying that it is exact, but has proven an invaluable guide past day 4 for good long range forecasting. My guess is that this project in Japan would be taking this into account and performing something like this type of ensemble method. If not, I would seriously question their results.
But can it.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:But can it.... (Score:2)
Distributed project (Score:5, Interesting)
for those who want to participate themselves. It is run by the University of Oxford in the UK, it is not affiliated with . So far only a windows client, but a Linux one is in the works. It is very CPU intensive, so if you have less than an 800mhz processor you shouldn't bother, it would take months to finish a single unit of work.
Hey, do you find it suprising that the nation that knows the least about climate science [smirkingchimp.com] is the one that is most skeptical about global warming?
"In little more than a decade, the United States has fallen significantly behind other countries in its ability to simulate and predict long-term shifts in climate, according to a wide range of scientists and recent federal studies."
"During the Clinton administration, the lack of American modeling leadership did not have a discernible impact on climate policy, various experts said. But it did prevent the United States from playing a more central role in writing critical sections of the Intergovernmental Panel's report -- particularly the part assessing the extent of human influence on the warming trend of recent decades.
In computing power, Dr. Sarachik said, "our top two centers together don't amount to one-fifth of the European effort."
In that article from the New York Times is from two years ago! It mentions the japanese plans to build the Earth Simulator.
Logical weirdness, there (Score:2)
So in "little more than a decade" we've fallen behind someone in ways that can only really be proven by data from a longitudinal study over many years? I'm not sure how we can be sure of that; we'd need more than a decade to compare long-term predictions to the results, right?
(I "get" where you're going, and it's an interesting point: Is our la
Re:Logical weirdness, there (Score:2)
I get happily surprised every time on Slashdot when someone makes a polite and well reasoned argument. Thank you!
Well, perhaps the data might not convince everyone that the politics are in the way of science
The New York Times has a zoo animal mascot?!? (Score:3, Insightful)
The article quoted from was in the New York Times originally, wasn't it?
I don't gather how you can say that America know the LEAST about climate science because the EU/Japn have fast computers.
Hey, here's an idea for anonymous cowards everywhere -- If you actually read the article, all the way through, you mig
Americans DO know the least about the climate (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Americans DO know the least about the climate (Score:2)
While I agree that too many high-school grads don't understand basic tenants of science, a survey of 25 students standing in line at one school is hardly a representative sample.
Similarly, from their page "More than half of the US population doesn't know that the earth orbits the sun or how scientists figured out that it does. Almost no one can explain what the phrase "orbits the sun" even means. Worse still
Re:Americans DO know the least about the climate (Score:2)
I have seen the "Private Universe" videotape and you can order it from the link I supplied if you want to see it too. My favorite part is when Professor Stephen Thernstrom, coauthor of the anti-affirmative action screed America in Black and White confidently demonstrates his ignorance of
Re:Distributed project (Score:2)
I believe the native habitat for chimpanzees is Africa, not zoos.
Does it .... (Score:1, Funny)
Surely the heat generated by the system will disrupt the real world much more than the butterfly which'll make the model useless unless it includes itself in the model.
Heh circular reasoning until you disappear up your own fundament!
Predicting Hurricaines.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Predicting Hurricaines.. (Score:3, Insightful)
The application here is in the area of climate forecasting, attempting to forecast trends in upcoming decades. It's not even important whether the model gets individual storms right, as long as the averages are realistic.
The advance is in becoming able to incorporate hurricanes in the simulation. This should help improve the realism of those trends and averages.
Re:Predicting Hurricaines.. (Score:2)
As the earth's climate and oceans heat up is the occurrence of large storms going to increase and / or their strength increase?
As sort of way to scrub off excess heat.
Neat Trick But... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Neat Trick But... (Score:2)
In the case of a model used for the daily forecast, there are archives and canned cases that can be used for comparison.
In the case of a climate model, you are inter
Act of God? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Act of God? (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't frustrate yourself! Don't worry about these folks!
Probably off topic but my daughter recently learned about how hurricanes form, and what powers them in school and was quite fascinated. My point is that the truth about our natural surroundings can be as interesting to those recently exposed to it (But I suppose it requires an open mind) as the fantasies concocted b
Re:Act of God? (Score:2, Insightful)
Supercomputer (Score:3, Funny)
No pussy-footing for NEC (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No pussy-footing for NEC (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No pussy-footing for NEC (Score:2)
Re:No pussy-footing for NEC (Score:2)
Re:No pussy-footing for NEC (Score:2, Interesting)
Also - keep in mind that linpa
When will the find that culprit butterfly .... (Score:3, Funny)
"They show that, for the first time, our climate models can be run at resolutions capable of ...
I have always heard that the flapping of a butterfly here can cause a storm in China ....
Just wondering whether someday the resolution will be so good that out of the millions of butterflies flapping, they will be able to track down that culprit whose flapping caused the storm in china ...
because if they can do it, you won't find me posting to slashdot, but on the run trying to kill that damn butterfly before I am blamed for it all ... The TIA and CAPPS goons shoot horses, don't they ... or is it people that they shoot ...
Not really predicting per se... (Score:2, Informative)
Nonsense in article (Score:3, Insightful)
The recent track buckling problem in the UK was caused by the use of cheap lightweight tracks (which is why our European neighbours were unaffected). I have to wonder though how the author of this article reaches the conclusion that simulating climate models will actually lead to less track buckling. It was already known that the tracks would buckle occaisionally, but those in charge of the railways planned for drivers to slow down and try to see buckled lines ahead (as if derailing at 60mph is acceptable!).
Re:Nonsense in article (Score:2)
It's plausible, although I read in The Times that the French use heavier steel which resists the expansion of the track. Also the ride quality on the continent is astonishingly better than that in the UK, so the rail inter-section spacing
So, its all to play a complicated game of.. (Score:2, Funny)
Lucky Bastards.
Intensity (Score:2)
Better models please (Score:4, Insightful)
Suddenly, the hurricane turned south and hit Honduras. Where it again stalled and hung out for 3 days. In the end, about 11,000 Hondurans died, primarily from massive mudslides that consumed enitre villages.
I really hope they improve the models significantly so that things like this don't have to happen. If hurricanes could be predicted with more accuracy, to the point that people and countries could trust the predictions, these areas could be evacuated.
Unfortunately, with the level of accuracy, there's such a wide area in the predicted path that it's impossible to evacuate everyone that could potentially be in the path in time to save them.
When I first moved down here, I though, "Gee, I'd like to see what a hurricane is like." Then Mitch showed up. When you have a category 5 hurricane on your doorstep, you start to re-evaluate your life a bit. The town I live in would have been leveled. I would have been one of the lucky ones. I had a car and would have simply driven inland to avoid it. A lot of people couldn't have afforded to do that.
With more accurate predictions, the government could sponsor the evacuations and save a lot of lives.
Re:Wow, I wander (Score:2)
Re:Cool! (Score:1, Funny)
guys dont wear skirts, wait...why is your handle
Re:Cool! (Score:2)
Re:imagine a beowolf cluster of those.. (Score:2)
Re:Simulator this (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Just waiting for the... (Score:2)
See, some Americans are OK!
we can solve that problem (Score:2)