EAS 5555

EAS 5555

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2018-2019.

This class will present an introductory overview of the common methodological approaches used today for numerical weather prediction and global climate modeling. Technical skills and in-depth understanding of the approaches will be emphasized through short weekly reading assignments and programming activities. An historical perspective on weather and climate modeling will be covered as well in the scope of this course because it helps put state-of-the-art numerical modeling in an appropriate context. Final projects will include running a weather or climate model on the National Center for Atmospheric Research's Cheyenne supercomputer, or other supercomputing facilities if students have access to other resources they would like to use. Cloud computing based solutions to numerical weather and climate modeling will also be covered.    

When Offered Spring (offered alternate years).

Prerequisites/Corequisites Prerequisite: MATH 1920 or MATH 2130, PHYS 2208.

Outcomes
  • Students will be able to understand the theory, derivation, and application of numerical techniques used today for climate and weather modeling.
  • Students will be able to explain how parameterization schemes are used and characterize their limitations.
  • Students will be able to configure and run climate and weather simulations independently.
  • Students will be able to modify underlying code to change model behavior.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session. 

  • 2 Credits Sat/Unsat

  • 18316 EAS 5555   LEC 001

    • TBA
    • Ault, T

  • Prerequisite: MATH 1920 or MATH 2130, PHYS 2208.