Galerkin Methods with Applications in Weather and Climate Forecasting

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Galerkin Methods with Applications in Weather and Climate Forecasting

 23 - 27 Mar 2015

ICMS, 15 South College Street Edinburgh

Scientific Organisers:

  • Colin Cotter, Imperial College London
  • Andreas Dedner, University of Warwick
  • Frank Giraldo, Naval Postgraduate School
  • Mark Taylor, Sandia National Laboratories

About:

Researchers developing, analyzing, and applying Galerkin methods with applications in weather forecasting and climate modelling were brought together in this workshop. The aim was to involve mathematicians, computer scientists, meteorologists and other specialists interested in this class of methods. The focus was on addressing the computational and analytical challenges faced by the next generation of climate and numerical weather prediction (NWP) models.

Speakers

  • Frank Giraldo, Naval Postgraduate School - NUMA: A Unified Continuous/Discontinuous Galerkin Regional/Global Nonhydrostatic Atmospheric Model
  • Ram Nair, National Center for Atmospheric Research - A Time-Split Discontinuous Galerkin Global Nonhydrostatic Dynamical Core
  • Dale Durran, University of Washington - A High-Order Positive-Definite Discontinuous Galerkin Method for Multi-Dimensional Scalar Transport
  • Daniel LeRoux, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 - DG Discrete Analyses and Numerical Simulations of Typical Waves for 2-D Environmental Problems

  • Robert Kirby, Baylor University - Fast Simplicial Finite Element Algorithms via Bernstein Polynomials

  • Christiane Jablonowski, University of Michigan - High-Order Adaptive Mesh Refinement and Variable-Resolution Techniques for Atmospheric General Circulation Models

  • Michal Kopera, Naval Postgraduate School - Towards Large-Scale Adaptive Simulations in NUMA

  • Martin Schreiber, University of Exeter - Towards Efficient High-Dimensional Simulations on Dynamically Adaptive Cartesian Grids

  • Hilary Weller, University of Reading - Numerical Solution of the Monge-Ampere Equation for Mesh Adaptivity on the Sphere

  • Colin Cotter, Imperial College London - Compatible Finite Elements for Numerical Weather Prediction

  • Alexander Linke, Weierstrass Institute -  Robust Discretization of the Coriolis Force in the Navier-Stokes Flows on Unstructured Grids

  • Fred Homewood, Cray - Cray: Delivering Performance for Compute, Storage and Analysis for Earth Sciences

  • Andreas Mueller, Naval Postgraduate School - Strong Scaling on More Than 700,000 Cores with the Atmospheric Model NUMA

  • Philipp Birken, Lund University - Towards Fast Solvers for DG Methods for Compressible Flows

  • James Maddison, University of Edinburgh - Mesh-Adaptive Quasi-Geostrophic Modelling

  • Lucas Wilcox, Naval Postgraduate School - Accelerating NUMA in a Performance Portable Way

  • Robert Kloefkorn, International Research Institute of Stavanger - Fully Implicit Discontinuous Galerkin Methods for Atmospheric Flow

  • Tan Bui-Thanh, The University of Texas - A Hybridized Discontinuous Galerkin Method for Earth System Models' Dynamical Cores

  • Matthew Norman, Oak Ridge National Laboratory - A Cheap, Large Time Step, Multi-Moment Alternative to Galerkin Methods

  • David Ham, Imperial College London - Higher Level Interfaces and Code Generation for Atmospheric Simulation

  • Jemma Shipton, Imperial College London - Compatible Finite Element Methods for Numerical Weather Prediction

  • Eike Mueller, University of Bath - Multigrid Preconditioners for Mixed Finite Element Discretisations of Atmospheric Equations of Motion on Extruded Grids

  • Carsten Burstedde, Universität Bonn - Parallel adaptive finite element methods for flow simulation

  • James Shaw, University of Reading - Numerical Representation of Mountains in Atmospheric Models

  • Mark Taylor, Sandia National Laboratories - Consistent Coupling of Finite Element Advection and Finite Volume Transport