Published:
Scientists Use Powerful Cray Supercomputer to Develop Groundbreaking Strategies in Weather Prediction
Latest Computer Models Zoom Down to Level of Individual Storm Cells

Global supercomputer leader Cray Inc. (NASDAQ: CRAY) today announced that scientists have leveraged the power of a Cray
supercomputer at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) to break new
ground in weather prediction. Researchers from the University of Oklahoma's
Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms (CAPS) and the National
Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) employed an innovative
combination of high resolution and controlled manipulation of numerical
model parameters and starting conditions to develop strategies that will
allow forecasters to better anticipate the formation of severe storms and
the supercells that give birth to destructive tornados. The research was
part of the NOAA Hazardous Weather Testbed (HWT) Spring Experiment.
"Each day during the Spring Experiment that was conducted from mid-April
through early June, CAPS scientists applied emerging scientific methods to
design a 10-member 'ensemble' of forecasts from the Weather Research and
Forecasting, or WRF, software model," explained Dr. Ming Xue, director of
CAPS. "Each member had a 4-kilometer horizontal resolution and covered
almost the entire continental U.S. Unlike a single-model forecast, this
ensemble not only predicted when and where particular weather might occur,
but also the likelihood of its occurrence."
"Ensembles have been employed by larger-scale weather models before, but
they've never been focused on the few-kilometer scales where individual
storms actually occur," Dr. Xue continued. "The ensemble approach is
exceptionally demanding when it comes to computational power and can only
be accomplished on a high-performance, scalable system such as the Cray
XT(TM)-based system at PSC."
Every day during the course of the experiment, terabytes (trillions of
bytes) of data were generated, archived and transferred from PSC to Norman,
Oklahoma, for use in forecasts, evaluations and future analysis and
research. The HWT facility in Norman is strategically located in the
recently built National Weather Center between the operational forecast
areas of the NOAA Storm Prediction Center (SPC) and the NOAA National
Weather Service Norman Forecast Office. These two offices, together with
the NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL), led the experiment
during the time of year when severe storm activity typically peaks in the
region.
"The researchers had previously struggled to complete a single modeling run
per day thus hampering a comprehensive understanding of how severe storms
and tornadoes form," said Per Nyberg, Cray Marketing Director for Earth
Sciences. "The scalability and sustained performance of the Cray XT system
at PSC allowed them to complete 11 runs each day while using more
sophisticated parameterizations. This is a key step in helping
forecasters predict violent storms in time to prevent injury and loss of
life."
About the NOAA Hazardous Weather Testbed Spring Experiment
The Spring Experiment conducted jointly by the SPC and NSSL would not have
been possible without contributions from multiple partners. These two
organizations, along with NOAA's Environmental Modeling Center (EMC) and
the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), worked with CAPS and
PSC in the design and execution of the ensemble forecasts. In addition, EMC
and NCAR provided separate high-resolution WRF model forecasts for a
complementary portion of the experiment. The WRF model was developed
primarily at NCAR and EMC. The CAPS forecasts were produced under the
support of the NOAA CSTAR program and the National Science Foundation
Linked Environments for Atmospheric Discovery Large ITR project. The NSF
TeraGrid and National Lambda Rail networks connected the groups in
Pittsburgh and Norman. Go to http://hwt.nssl.noaa.gov/Spring_2007/ for more
information.
About Cray Inc.
As a global leader in supercomputing, Cray provides highly advanced
supercomputers and world-class services and support to government, industry
and academia. Cray technology enables scientists and engineers to achieve
remarkable breakthroughs by accelerating performance, improving efficiency
and extending the capabilities of their most demanding applications. Cray's
Adaptive Supercomputing vision will result in innovative next-generation
products that integrate diverse processing technologies into a unified
architecture, allowing customers to surpass today's limitations and meeting
the market's continued demand for realized performance. Go to www.cray.com
for more information.
Cray is a registered trademark, and Cray XT is a trademark, of Cray Inc.
All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
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