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91探花
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Tim Palmer

Emeritus

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Predictability of weather and climate
Tim.Palmer@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72897
Robert Hooke Building, room S43
  • About
  • Publications

Modelling: Build imprecise supercomputers

Nature Springer Nature 526:7571 (2015) 32-33

On the use of programmable hardware and reduced numerical precision in earth-system modeling

Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems American Geophysical Union 7:3 (2015) 1393-1408

Authors:

Peter D D眉ben, Francis P Russell, Xinyu Niu, Wayne Luk, Tim N Palmer

Abstract:

Programmable hardware, in particular Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), promises a significant increase in computational performance for simulations in geophysical fluid dynamics compared with CPUs of similar power consumption. FPGAs allow adjusting the representation of floating-point numbers to specific application needs. We analyze the performance-precision trade-off on FPGA hardware for the two-scale Lorenz '95 model. We scale the size of this toy model to that of a high-performance computing application in order to make meaningful performance tests. We identify the minimal level of precision at which changes in model results are not significant compared with a maximal precision version of the model and find that this level is very similar for cases where the model is integrated for very short or long intervals. It is therefore a useful approach to investigate model errors due to rounding errors for very short simulations (e.g., 50 time steps) to obtain a range for the level of precision that can be used in expensive long-term simulations. We also show that an approach to reduce precision with increasing forecast time, when model errors are already accumulated, is very promising. We show that a speed-up of 1.9 times is possible in comparison to FPGA simulations in single precision if precision is reduced with no strong change in model error. The single-precision FPGA setup shows a speed-up of 2.8 times in comparison to our model implementation on two 6-core CPUs for large model setups.

Bell's conspiracy, Schrdinger's black cat and global invariant sets

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences The Royal Society 373:2047 (2015) 20140246

New geometric concepts in the foundations of physics

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences The Royal Society 373:2047 (2015) 20140250

Authors:

Andreas Dring, Tim Palmer

Invariant Set Theory: Violating Measurement Independence without Fine Tuning, Conspiracy, Constraints on Free Will or Retrocausality

ArXiv 1507.02117 (2015)

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