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Accelerating large-eddy simulations of clouds with Tensor Processing Units
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  • Sheide Chammas,
  • Qing Wang,
  • Tapio Schneider,
  • Matthias Ihme,
  • Yi-fan Chen,
  • John Anderson
Sheide Chammas
Google inc

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Qing Wang
Google Inc
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Tapio Schneider
California Institute of Technology
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Matthias Ihme
Stanford University
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Yi-fan Chen
Google Inc
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John Anderson
Google Inc
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Abstract

Clouds, especially low clouds, are crucial for regulating Earth’s energy balance and mediating the response of the climate system to changes in greenhouse gas concentrations. Despite their importance for climate, they remain relatively poorly understood and are inaccurately represented in climate models. A principal reason is that the high computational expense of simulating them with large-eddy simulations (LES) has inhibited broad and systematic numerical experimentation and the generation of large datasets for training parametrization schemes for climate models. Here we demonstrate LES of low clouds on Tensor Processing Units (TPUs), application-specific integrated circuits that were originally developed for machine learning applications. We show that TPUs in conjunction with tailored software implementations can be used to simulate computationally challenging stratocumulus clouds in conditions observed during the Dynamics and Chemistry of Marine Stratocumulus (DYCOMS) field study. The TPU-based LES code successfully reproduces clouds during DYCOMS and opens up the large computational resources available on TPUs to cloud simulations. The code enables unprecedented weak and strong scaling of LES, making it possible, for example, to simulate stratocumulus with $10\times$ speedup over real-time evolution in domains with a $34.7 \mathrm{km} \times 53.8 \mathrm{km}$ horizontal cross section. The results open up new avenues for computational experiments and for substantially enlarging the sample of LES available to train parameterizations of low clouds.
02 Feb 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
09 Feb 2023Published in ESS Open Archive