NOAA Doubles Their Computing Power = More Accurate Forecasts in USA

SnowBrains |
Gulf of Alaska storm about to deliver.
Gulf of Alaska storm about to deliver.

NOAA has just announced that they have doubled their computing power in their weather forecasting supercomputers. ย The new computers will be able to perform 213 trillion calculations per second. ย Theyโ€™ll be able to create weather forecast models that will show a 15% improvement in both the track & the intensity of a forecasted storm.

These are huge improvements that will translate into more accurate snow forecasts in the USA. ย All skiers and riders are obnoxious weather freaks and nothing should thrill us more than improved forecast models in the USA. ย Europe has long been out forecasting us and they still likely will as they still have bigger, better, faster computers. ย Yet, this doubling of our computer power is a step in the right direction that will give us snow-lovers a clearer picture of where we need to be and when for the next big snowstorm.

More importantly, better forecast models could very well save lives as warnings will be able to be given earlier and with more certainty as well as accuracy.

Katrina
Katrina

NOAA PRESS RELEASE:

With improved physics and a storm-tracking algorithm, the model has displayed up to a 15 percent improvement in both track and intensity forecasts, compared to last year’s version of the model.

Whizzing through 213 trillion calculations per second, newly upgraded supercomputers ofย NOAAโ€™s National Weather Serviceย are now more than twice as fast in processing sophisticated computer models to provide more accurate forecasts further out in time. And as the hurricane season ramps up, forecasters will be armed with an enhanced hurricane model that will improve track and intensity forecasts.

This is the Hurricane Weather Research and Forecasting (HWRF) model showing the Tropical Storm Flossie precipitation forecast for the Hawaiian Islands on July 29, 2013. HWRF is one of the sophisticated numerical computer models now being run on NOAA's new supercomputers. Download here (Credit: NOAA)
This is the Hurricane Weather Research and Forecasting (HWRF) model showing the Tropical Storm Flossie precipitation forecast for the Hawaiian Islands on July 29, 2013. HWRF is one of the sophisticated numerical computer models now being run on NOAA’s new supercomputers.ย ย (Credit: NOAA)

The scientific data and insights that these newly upgraded supercomputers will provide are essential to help government officials, communities, and businesses better understand and manage the risks associated with extreme weather and water events. In support of the presidentโ€™s Climate Action Plan, the administration will continue to take steps like this to analyze and predict climate variability amid an increasing number of extreme natural events affecting the nation.

โ€œThese improvements are just the beginning and build on our previous success. They lay the foundation for further computing enhancements and more accurate forecast models that are within reach,โ€ saidย Louis W. Uccellini, Ph.D., director of NOAAโ€™s National Weather Service. โ€œThese upgrades are a game-changer for the entire public and private weather industry. In addition to the benefits to our own forecasters and products, we will provide our private sector partners with better information to empower them to enhance their services.โ€

Nicknamed โ€œTide,โ€ the supercomputer in Reston, Va., and its Orlando-based backup named โ€œGyre,โ€ are operating with 213 teraflops (TF) โ€” up from the 90 TF with the computers that preceded them. This higher processing power allows the National Weather Service to implement an enhanced Hurricane Weather Research and Forecasting (HWRF) model.

“These forecasting advances can save lives,โ€ said U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, who helped get funding to add even more capacity to the supercomputer. โ€œIt’s going to allow for better tracking of life-threatening storms and more accurately predict when and where they’ll hit, and with what intensity.”

With improved physics and a storm-tracking algorithm, the model has displayed up to a 15 percent improvement in both track and intensity forecasts, compared to last year’s version of the model. The upgraded HWRF is also capable of processing real-time data collected from the inner core of a tropical system by the tail Doppler radar attached to NOAAโ€™s P3 hurricane hunter aircraft, data which are expected to produce even greater forecast improvements.

โ€œNext comes the quantum leap,โ€ added Uccellini. Following this round of long-planned upgrades, funding requested in the FY 2014 Presidentโ€™s Budget, in addition to funding provided to NOAA by Congress in the spring of 2013 as part of the Hurricane Sandy emergency supplemental appropriations bill, would increase computing power even further to 1,950 TF by summer 2015. โ€œThat gives us the necessary computer power to run an enhanced version of our primary forecast model, theย Global Forecast System,โ€ said Uccellini.

“Given recent events like the tornado in Moore, Oklahoma or Superstorm Sandy, federal weather resources and personnel should be considered vital national assets. These upgrades assure world-class capabilities and a continued pathway to keep American lives and property safer,” said J. Marshall Shepherd Ph.D., president of the American Meteorological Society and Professor at the University of Georgia. “As a father of two children and a scientist that understands looming weather threats, I take comfort in these developments.”

Investments in supercomputing power for weather prediction are another step in NOAAโ€™s efforts to build aย Weather-Ready Nation. NOAAโ€™s Weather-Ready Nation initiative, launched nearly two-years ago, has resulted in improvements in products, services and the way information is communicated to the public and partners. These improvements increase resilience to severe weather and reduce the potential of significant societal and economic impacts from severe weather.ย  A Weather-Ready Nation is a society that is prepared for, and responds effectively to, weather-related events.

NOAAโ€™s mission is to understand and predict changes in the Earth’s environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and to conserve and manage our coastal and marine resources. Join us onFacebook,ย Twitterย and our otherย social media channels.


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