Presenters-0468: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{Presenters temp |CSDMS meeting event title=CSDMS 2020: Linking Ecosphere and Geosphere |CSDMS meeting event year=2020 |CSDMS meeting presentation type=Clinic |CSDMS meeting..." |
m Text replacement - "\|CSDMS meeting youtube views=\{\{(Youtube_[^}]+)\}\}" to "|CSDMS meeting youtube views={{#explode:{{$1}}| |0}} |CSDMS meeting youtube AverageViews={{#explode:{{$1}}| |1}}" |
||
(8 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
|CSDMS meeting state=Colorado | |CSDMS meeting state=Colorado | ||
|CSDMS meeting email address=hutton.eric@gmail.com | |CSDMS meeting email address=hutton.eric@gmail.com | ||
|CSDMS meeting title presentation= | |CSDMS meeting title presentation=Part I: Exploring Surface Processes using CSDMS Tools: How to Build Coupled Models | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Presenters coauthors | {{Presenters coauthors | ||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
|CSDMS meeting state co1=Colorado | |CSDMS meeting state co1=Colorado | ||
|CSDMS meeting email address co1=mpiper@colorado.edu | |CSDMS meeting email address co1=mpiper@colorado.edu | ||
}} | |||
{{Presenters coauthors | |||
|CSDMS meeting first name co1=Irina | |||
|CSDMS meeting last name co1=Overeem | |||
|CSDMS meeting institute co1=CSDMS IF | |||
|CSDMS meeting country co1=United States | |||
|CSDMS meeting state co1=Colorado | |||
|CSDMS meeting email address co1=irina.overeem@colorado.edu | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{Presenters presentation | {{Presenters presentation | ||
|CSDMS meeting abstract presentation= | |CSDMS meeting abstract presentation=Predicting long-term Earth surface change, the impacts of short-term natural hazards and biosphere/geosphere dynamics requires computational models. Many existing numerical models quantitatively describe sediment transport processes, predicting terrestrial and coastal change at a great variety of scales. However, these models often address a single process or component of the earth surface system. | ||
The Community Surface Dynamics Modeling System is an NSF-funded initiative that supports the open software efforts of the surface processes community. CSDMS distributes >200 models and tools, and provides cyberinfrastructure to simulate lithosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, or cryosphere dynamics. Many of the most exciting problems in these fields arise at the interfaces of different environments and through complex interactions of processes. | |||
This workshop presents recent cyberinfrastructure tools for hypothesis-driven modeling— the Python Modeling Tool (PyMT) and LandLab. PyMT allows users to interactively run and couple numerical models contributed by the community. There are already tools for coastal & permafrost modeling, stratigraphic and subsidence modeling, and terrestrial landscape evolution modeling (including hillslope, overflow, landslide processes, and a suite of erosion processes with vegetation interactions), and these are easy to run and further develop in a Python environment. | |||
This 2-part tutorial aims to provide a short overview of the PyMT and Landlab, a demonstration of running a coupled model, and hands-on exercises using Jupyter notebooks in small groups of attendees. The organizers will facilitate break-out groups for discussion of pressing research needs and then have a plenary discussion with reports of each of the breakouts on future frontier applications of coupled landscape/bioscape process modeling. | |||
Materials for this clinic can be found at: https://github.com/csdms/csdms-2020 | |||
|CSDMS meeting youtube code=0 | |CSDMS meeting youtube code=NEdN-lbLS5A | ||
|CSDMS meeting youtube views={{#explode:{{Youtube_NEdN-lbLS5A}}| |0}} | |||
|CSDMS meeting youtube AverageViews={{#explode:{{Youtube_NEdN-lbLS5A}}| |1}} | |||
|CSDMS meeting participants=0 | |CSDMS meeting participants=0 | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Presenters keywords temp | {{Presenters keywords temp | ||
|Presentation keywords= | |Presentation keywords=CSDMS Tools | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Presenters keywords temp | {{Presenters keywords temp | ||
|Presentation keywords= | |Presentation keywords=coupled modeling | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Presenters keywords temp | {{Presenters keywords temp | ||
Line 40: | Line 52: | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Presenters additional material | {{Presenters additional material | ||
|Working group member=Terrestrial Working Group, Coastal Working Group, Marine Working Group, Education and Knowledge Transfer (EKT) Working Group, Cyberinformatics and Numerics Working Group, Hydrology | |Working group member=Terrestrial Working Group, Coastal Working Group, Marine Working Group, Education and Knowledge Transfer (EKT) Working Group, Cyberinformatics and Numerics Working Group, Hydrology Focus Research Group, Chesapeake Focus Research Group, Critical Zone Focus Research Group, Human Dimensions Focus Research Group, Geodynamics Focus Research Group, Ecosystem Dynamics Focus Research Group, Coastal Vulnerability Initiative, Continental Margin Initiative, Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning Initiative, Modeling Platform Interoperability Initiative | ||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 16:33, 11 June 2025
Abstract
Predicting long-term Earth surface change, the impacts of short-term natural hazards and biosphere/geosphere dynamics requires computational models. Many existing numerical models quantitatively describe sediment transport processes, predicting terrestrial and coastal change at a great variety of scales. However, these models often address a single process or component of the earth surface system.
The Community Surface Dynamics Modeling System is an NSF-funded initiative that supports the open software efforts of the surface processes community. CSDMS distributes >200 models and tools, and provides cyberinfrastructure to simulate lithosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, or cryosphere dynamics. Many of the most exciting problems in these fields arise at the interfaces of different environments and through complex interactions of processes.
This workshop presents recent cyberinfrastructure tools for hypothesis-driven modeling— the Python Modeling Tool (PyMT) and LandLab. PyMT allows users to interactively run and couple numerical models contributed by the community. There are already tools for coastal & permafrost modeling, stratigraphic and subsidence modeling, and terrestrial landscape evolution modeling (including hillslope, overflow, landslide processes, and a suite of erosion processes with vegetation interactions), and these are easy to run and further develop in a Python environment.
This 2-part tutorial aims to provide a short overview of the PyMT and Landlab, a demonstration of running a coupled model, and hands-on exercises using Jupyter notebooks in small groups of attendees. The organizers will facilitate break-out groups for discussion of pressing research needs and then have a plenary discussion with reports of each of the breakouts on future frontier applications of coupled landscape/bioscape process modeling.
Materials for this clinic can be found at: https://github.com/csdms/csdms-2020
Please acknowledge the original contributors when you are using this material. If there are any copyright issues, please let us know (CSDMSweb@colorado.edu) and we will respond as soon as possible.
Of interest for: