The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20020723014728/http://128.194.106.6:80/~baum/climate_modeling.html
Last checked or updated: Feb. 10, 1997
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General research on understanding the chemical-climatic environment of the atmsophere, e.g. fine-scale mixing of atmospheric pollutants, stratosphere-troposphere exchange, etc.
[http://www.atm.damtp.cam.ac.uk/]
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The climate group at CERFACS site has information about their current research, documents and publications, and a Climate Experiments Atlas online. They've developed an online viewing system called Vairmer to enable browsing the Atlas via the Web.
[http://www.cerfacs.fr/globc/]
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The DOE Computer Hardware, Advanced Mathematics and Model Physics program is interested in the development of new mathematical methods for the solution of the shallow water equations in spherical geometry since they are used as a kernel for both oceanic and atmospheric general circulation models (GCMs). This has source code for single- and multi-processor spectral transform shallow water models used for benchmarking purposes as well as some documentation.
[http://www.esd.ornl.gov/programs/chammp/chammp.html]
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This site contains recent publications in PDF format, a description of their various atmosphere and ocean models, descriptions of current research projects, and the Country Specific Model for Intertemporal Climate (COSMIC), a program for calculating a range of dynamic country--specific climate change scenarios.
[http://crga.atmos.uiuc.edu/]
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Contains information about various projects going on at the CIC, including the PILPS and RICE Projects and the CCIX Project.
[http://cic.mq.edu.au/]
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Includes information about researchers, recent papers, on-line publication, dendroclimatology, and more.
[http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/]
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This department has developed and uses a general circulation model called BUGS (BeaUtiful General circulation modeling System).
[http://www.atmos.colostate.edu/]
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A CLIVAR project to compare the control climate simulations of the coupled climate models currently in use.
[http://www-pcmdi.llnl.gov/covey/cmip/cmiphome.html]
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This center, located a Penn State, combines the departments of Geosciences, Meteorology, Geography and Mineral Economics to search for links between the Earth's physical processes and past and future global change. Research focuses include the global water cycle, biogeochemical cycles, Earth system history, and human impacts on the Earth system.
[http://www.essc.psu.edu/]
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A supercomputing center for climate research charged with supporting the German climate research community with computational, archival and post processing resources. This contains links to climate data resources, satellite data, and graphics and visualization resources at DKRZ.
[http://www.dkrz.de/index-eng.html]
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The goal of this lab is to expand the scientific understanding of those physical processes which govern the behavior of the atmosphere and oceans as complex fluid systems, and the scientific work encompasses such disciplines as meteorology, oceanography, hydrology, classical physics, fluid dynamics, chemistry, applied math, high-speed digital computation, and experiment design and analysis. The site contains the GFDL Modular Ocean Model (MOM), climatological data sets, and information about the projects and staff.
[http://www.gfdl.gov/]
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This is a NASA research institute located near Columbia University in New York City, and is primarily engaged in studies of global climate change. The site contains information about the various research programs, especially Earth observations, global climate modeling, climate impacts, and planetary atmospheres as well as links to datasets, images and software pertinent to their research mission.
[http://www.giss.nasa.gov/]
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This center, located in Bracknell, UK, exists to provide the UK government with an authoritative, up-to-date assessment of both natural and man-made climate change. This is accomplished via a research program whose main aspects are the simulation of the present climate, understanding the factors controlling climate change and predicting the climate of the next century, and developing and using global climate simulation models. The site contains an index of datasets and a list of refereed publications originating at the center.
[http://www.meto.govt.uk/sec5/sec5pg1.html]
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The mission of this program is to develop an advanced generation of parallel climate models together with a coputational framework that will provide a comprehensive climate systems modling capability on high-performance computing systems. The site contains brief information about the program and some graphical output.
[http://www.llnl.gov/liv_comp/meiko/apps/wehner/camille.html]
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A French research group that engages in climate modeling amongst other things.
[http://www.lmd.ens.fr/english/]
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A project to develop ocean and atmospheric general circulation models that can be used on massively parallel computers.
[http://www.acl.lanl.gov/GrandChal/GCM/gcm.html]
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This was established to perform numerical experiments to identify and quantify the uncertainties associated with predictions of greenhouse gas-induced climate change, to create a protocol for analyzing the experimental results, and to communicate their findings. The site contains detailed on-line descriptions (with graphics) of the progress of the project as well as links to the institutions that constitute the consortium.
[http://www.epri.com/Strategic/Environment/MECCA/MECCA.html]
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A collaboration between the Center for Global Change Science and the Laboratory for Computer Science at MIT to develop a state-of-the-art model of the atmosphere and ocean for studying the climate using parallel computers.
[http://geoid.mit.edu/climatemodel/climatemodel.htm]
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This site contains information about their research purposes and projects as well as their staff. Also available are some source codes and research reports.
[http://pong.gsfc.nasa.gov/]
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Specializes in lower and middle atmosphere research using models and observations. Site includes some results concerning column-integrated ozone, monthly cloudiness, and sudden stratospheric warming.
[http://rossby.larc.nasa.gov/]
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A division of NCAR with the mission of promoting further understanding of the physical causes of present and past climates and of large-scale atmospheric and oceanic dynamics. It consists of several sections, two of whom are concerned with global climate modeling and shown below.
[http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/]
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The Climate Systems Model is the latest coupled atmosphere/ocean/surface model from the climate modeling group at NCAR. It is slated to replace the GENESIS model described below. It comprises the CCM3, a Land Surface Model (LSM), and an ocean circulation model (a version of the MOM code). The system also has a flux coupler to control the interations of the model components.
[http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/csm/index.html]
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An effort to develop a comprehensive, first-generation model of Earth's climate system for use in global climate change research. The site contains several images produced from project simulations as well as information about GENESIS workshops.
[http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/ccr/genesis.html]
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This is the freely available general circulation model that has been developed at NCAR and used by many groups around the world. The site contains the source code and documentation for the model.
[http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/cms/ccm.html]
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The Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison coordinates the Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (PMIP) and engages in research and other collaborative activities directed to diagnosing global climate models and to improving their performance. They have also developed the VCS data analysis software.
[http://www-pcmdi.llnl.gov/]
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A multidisciplinary research center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison specializing in atmospheric studies of the Earth and other planets, interactive computing and image processing, and spaceflight hardware design and fabrication. The site contains further information about itself as well as data sources and links, research information, and image processing and graphing software.
[http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/]
S. Baum
Dept. of Oceanography
Texas A&M; University
baum@astra.tamu.edu