E3SM Scientists Make a Splash in Hawaii
The Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM) team gave a total of seven talks at the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS) 15th Annual Meeting, June 3 to 8, 2018, in Honolulu, Hawaii.
E3SM scientists presented on different aspects of the earth system model, including the development of the E3SM Atmosphere Model, high-resolution simulations from E3SM v0, E3SM v1, and E3SM-MMF, and sensitivity of E3SM atmosphere simulations to cloud and convective parameterizations.
Presenters included:
- Ruby Leung (invited), Pacific Northwest National Laboratory: “Impacts of Resolution on Water Cycle Processes in the Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM)”
- Wuyin Lin, Brookhaven National Laboratory: “Tropical Cyclones Simulations with E3SMv1: General Characteristics and Sensitivity to Resolution and Convective Parameterization”
- Mathew Maltrud (invited), Los Alamos National Laboratory: “Results from High Resolution Climate Simulations Using the Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM)”
- Phil Rasch (invited), Pacific Northwest National Laboratory: “Taking a Deep Breath in Model Development: Identifying Opportunities for Addressing Some Persistent Biases in Earth System Models”
- Qi Tang, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: “Evaluate High-Resolution E3SMv1 Atmosphere Model Simulations over the Contiguous United States”
- Shaocheng Xie, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: “Toward a Better Understanding of Cloud and Convective Processes Simulated in the E3SM Atmospheric Model Version 1”
- Yuying Zhang, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: “Evaluation of EAMv1 Simulated Clouds and Their Sensitivity to Model Resolution”