Design and Performance Analysis of a Massively Parallel Atmospheric General Circulation Model
Author(s) -
Daniel S. Schaffer,
Max J. Suárez
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
scientific programming
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.269
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1875-919X
pISSN - 1058-9244
DOI - 10.1155/2000/371012
Subject(s) - massively parallel , computer science , general circulation model , longitude , parallel computing , suite , fortran , climate model , supercomputer , geographic coordinate system , meteorology , latitude , climate change , geology , operating system , history , oceanography , physics , geodesy , archaeology
In the 1990's, computer manufacturers are increasingly turning to the development of parallel processor machines to meet the high performance needs of their customers. Simultaneously, atmospheric scientists studying weather and climate phenomena ranging from hurricanes to El Niño to global warming require increasingly fine resolution models. Here, implementation of a parallel atmospheric general circulation model (GCM) which exploits the power of massively parallel machines is described. Using the horizontal data domain decomposition methodology, this FORTRAN 90 model is able to integrate a 0.6° longitude by 0.5° latitude problem at a rate of 19 Gigaflops on 512 processors of a Cray T3E 600; corresponding to 280 seconds of wall-clock time per simulated model day. At this resolution, the model has 64 times as many degrees of freedom and performs 400 times as many floating point operations per simulated day as the model it replaces
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