Hello everyone,
As the submission period for the Fall 2022 AGU meeting has opened, please consider submitting an abstract to the SY008. Community Modeling and Open Innovation to Advance Earth Prediction Systems at the AGU Fall Meeting, 12-16 December 2022, in-person in Chicago, IL, and online. This session, which is new to AGU, is being organized by the Weather Enterprise. The deadline for all submissions is Wednesday, 3 August 2022, 23:59 EDT.
The session details are as follows:
SY008. Community Modeling and Open Innovation to Advance Earth Prediction Systems
Community Modeling and Open Innovation to Advance Earth Prediction Systems
Provide an opportunity for the broad research community to share information about their latest developments and how these innovations are advancing the capabilities of community modeling systems. Topics in this session will include discussions on the motivation and process by which the community can work together to explore, validate, and integrate all aspects important to advancing weather and climate prediction. Open innovation spans everything from observation impact, model code, and software engineering to experimental design and computing architectures, post-processing, ensemble design, including model uncertainty.
Best regards, co-conveners,
Jose-Henrique Alves, Neil Jacobs, Louisa Nance and Hendrik Tolman
As the submission period for the Fall 2022 AGU meeting has opened, please consider submitting an abstract to the SY008. Community Modeling and Open Innovation to Advance Earth Prediction Systems at the AGU Fall Meeting, 12-16 December 2022, in-person in Chicago, IL, and online. This session, which is new to AGU, is being organized by the Weather Enterprise. The deadline for all submissions is Wednesday, 3 August 2022, 23:59 EDT.
The session details are as follows:
SY008. Community Modeling and Open Innovation to Advance Earth Prediction Systems
Community Modeling and Open Innovation to Advance Earth Prediction Systems
Provide an opportunity for the broad research community to share information about their latest developments and how these innovations are advancing the capabilities of community modeling systems. Topics in this session will include discussions on the motivation and process by which the community can work together to explore, validate, and integrate all aspects important to advancing weather and climate prediction. Open innovation spans everything from observation impact, model code, and software engineering to experimental design and computing architectures, post-processing, ensemble design, including model uncertainty.
Best regards, co-conveners,
Jose-Henrique Alves, Neil Jacobs, Louisa Nance and Hendrik Tolman