NERSC logo National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center
  A DOE Office of Science User Facility
  at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
 

A NERSC INCITE project

Bridging the Gap between Climate and Weather

reanalysis of historic storm

The distinction between climate and weather was expressed most succinctly by science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein: “Climate is what you expect; weather is what you get.” But as global warming produces more noticeable changes on a planetary scale, how do we even know what to expect in a particular region?  [MORE]
NERSC is the flagship scientific computing facility for the Office of Science in the U.S. Department of Energy and a world leader in accelerating scientific discovery through computation. NERSC is located at Berkeley Lab in Berkeley, California.

News

INCITE Call for Proposals

The DOE Office of Science is inviting proposals for the Innovative and Novel Computational Impact on Theory and Experiment program. The INCITE program will award 680 million supercomputer processor hours to support high-impact scientific advances. [MORE]

New Breed of Supercomputers

NERSC and Berkeley Lab researchers have proposed an innovative way to improve global climate change predictions by using a supercomputer with low-power embedded microprocessors. [MORE]

May 30 Tutorial at Berkeley Lab

"Principles and Practice of Experimental Performance Measurement and Analysis of Parallel Applications", Bernd Mohr, Jeulich Supercomputing Center [MORE]

Now Computing

A small sample of computations taking place on NERSC supercomputers right now.
ProjectMachineProcessors
Novel density functional theory approaches to the statistical mechanics of hydrogen bonded systems Franklin 2,560
Interaction of Turbulence and Chemistry in Lean Premixed Laboratory Flames Franklin 2,416
Parallel Computation for Laser Plasma Interactions at Relativistic Intensities Franklin 2,416
Interaction of Turbulence and Chemistry in Lean Premixed Laboratory Flames Franklin 2,416
Molecular Dynameomics Bassi 360
Nanoscale Electrodynamics Jacquard 128

Science @NERSC

Hurricane Ioke

Breeding Bigger Hurricanes

Greenhouse gases are linked to growing intensity of tropical storms

Rising ocean temperatures in key hurricane breeding grounds of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans are due primarily to human-caused increases in greenhouse gas concentrations, according to a recent study.

Using 22 different computer models of the climate system, researchers have shown that the warming sea surface temperatures (SSTs) of the tropical Atlantic and Pacific oceans over the last century are linked to human activities. Research published during the past year has uncovered evidence of a link between rising ocean temperatures and increases in hurricane intensity.

[Article]


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