Climbing down Charney's ladder: Machine Learning and the post-Dennard era of computational climate science

05/24/2020
by   V. Balaji, et al.
0

The advent of digital computing in the 1950s sparked a revolution in the science of weather and climate. Meteorology, long practised as an art based on extrapolating patterns in space and time, gave way to computational methods in a decade of advances in numerical weather forecasting. Those same methods also gave rise to computational climate science, studying the behaviour of those same numerical equations over very long time intervals, and changes in external boundary conditions. Several subsequent decades of exponential growth in computational power have brought us to the present day, where models ever grow in resolution and complexity, capable of mastery of many small-scale phenomena with global repercussions, and ever more intricate feedbacks in the Earth system. We have also come to understand the central role played by randomness in an underdetermined physical system. The current juncture in computing, seven decades later, heralds an end to ever smaller computational units and ever faster arithmetic, what is called Dennard scaling. This is prompting a fundamental change in our approach to the simulation of weather and climate, potentially as revolutionary as that wrought by John von Neumann in the 1950s. One approach could return us to an earlier era of pattern recognition and extrapolation, this time aided by computational power. Another approach could lead us to insights that continue to be expressed in mathematical equations. In either approach, or any synthesis of those, it is clearly no longer the steady march of the last few decades, continuing to add detail to ever more elaborate models. In this prospectus, we attempt to show the outlines how this may unfold in the coming decades, a new harnessing of physical knowledge, computation, and data.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 5

research
07/04/2023

ClimateLearn: Benchmarking Machine Learning for Weather and Climate Modeling

Modeling weather and climate is an essential endeavor to understand the ...
research
10/22/2022

Compressing multidimensional weather and climate data into neural networks

Weather and climate simulations produce petabytes of high-resolution dat...
research
08/24/2020

Machine learning for weather and climate are worlds apart

Modern weather and climate models share a common heritage, and often eve...
research
05/16/2018

Exponential Integrators with Parallel-in-Time Rational Approximations for Climate and Weather Simulations

High-performance computing trends towards many-core systems are expected...
research
05/04/2017

Exponential scaling of neural algorithms - a future beyond Moore's Law?

Although the brain has long been considered a potential inspiration for ...
research
12/11/2020

The Rise of AI-Driven Simulators: Building a New Crystal Ball

The use of computational simulation is by now so pervasive in society th...
research
04/24/2019

Applying machine learning to improve simulations of a chaotic dynamical system using empirical error correction

Dynamical weather and climate prediction models underpin many studies of...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset