The use of stochastic processing hardware and low precision arithmetic in atmospheric models is investigated. Stochastic processors allow hardware-induced faults in calculations, sacrificing bit-reproducibility and precision in exchange for improvements in performance and potentially accuracy of forecasts, due to a reduction in power consumption that could allow higher resolution. A similar trade-off is achieved using low precision arithmetic, with improvements in computation and communication speed and savings in storage and memory requirements. As high-performance computing becomes more massively parallel and power intensive, these two approaches may be important stepping stones in the pursuit of global cloud-resolving atmospheric modelli...
Better weather and climate forecasts are needed to maximise the ability of societies worldwide to pr...
© 2015 IEEE.The computationally intensive nature of atmospheric modelling is an ideal target for har...
Representing all variables in double‐precision in weather and climate models may be a waste of compu...
The use of stochastic processing hardware and low precision arithmetic in atmospheric models is inve...
AbstractThe use of stochastic processing hardware and low precision arithmetic in atmospheric models...
A reduction of computational cost would allow higher resolution in numerical weather predictions wit...
Accurate forecasts of weather and climate will become increasingly important as the world adapts to ...
Inexact hardware design, which advocates trading the accuracy of computations in exchange for signif...
Increasing the resolution of numerical models has played a large part in improving the accuracy of w...
Progress towards more reliable weather and climate forecasts is limited by the resolution of numeric...
Reconfigurable architectures are becoming mainstream: Amazon, Microsoft and IBM are supporting such ...
Motivated by recent advances in operational weather forecasting, we study the efficacy of low-precis...
Reducing numerical precision can save computational costs which can then be reinvested for more usef...
The simulation of quasi-persistent regime structures in an atmospheric model with horizontal resolut...
We present an analysis of the performance aspects of an atmospheric general circulation model at the...
Better weather and climate forecasts are needed to maximise the ability of societies worldwide to pr...
© 2015 IEEE.The computationally intensive nature of atmospheric modelling is an ideal target for har...
Representing all variables in double‐precision in weather and climate models may be a waste of compu...
The use of stochastic processing hardware and low precision arithmetic in atmospheric models is inve...
AbstractThe use of stochastic processing hardware and low precision arithmetic in atmospheric models...
A reduction of computational cost would allow higher resolution in numerical weather predictions wit...
Accurate forecasts of weather and climate will become increasingly important as the world adapts to ...
Inexact hardware design, which advocates trading the accuracy of computations in exchange for signif...
Increasing the resolution of numerical models has played a large part in improving the accuracy of w...
Progress towards more reliable weather and climate forecasts is limited by the resolution of numeric...
Reconfigurable architectures are becoming mainstream: Amazon, Microsoft and IBM are supporting such ...
Motivated by recent advances in operational weather forecasting, we study the efficacy of low-precis...
Reducing numerical precision can save computational costs which can then be reinvested for more usef...
The simulation of quasi-persistent regime structures in an atmospheric model with horizontal resolut...
We present an analysis of the performance aspects of an atmospheric general circulation model at the...
Better weather and climate forecasts are needed to maximise the ability of societies worldwide to pr...
© 2015 IEEE.The computationally intensive nature of atmospheric modelling is an ideal target for har...
Representing all variables in double‐precision in weather and climate models may be a waste of compu...