So, climateprediction.net runs a distributed computing climate model (similar to SETI@Home). Basically, they send out climate model runs to users and then the models run on your computer's spare processing power (e.g., during screen saver use). NCSU has a team that currently consists of only 6 people, but the best University teams have around 10 times that. I figured with such a huge student body and alumni network we could definitely find 100 members.If you want to join, first you need to download BOINC (http://boinc.berkeley.edu/). Then when it asks to pick a project pick climateprediction (we also have a SETI team, though). Climateprediction will then have you register and pick a team. Just search for NCSU as a keyword and we should show up. Then you are all set.Thanks a lot. Let me know if you have any questions.
8/23/2009 10:08:22 AM
good luck getting users (seriously)...you will, however, be competing with the folding@home membership: message_topic.aspx?topic=118820[Edited on August 23, 2009 at 10:33 AM. Reason : .]
8/23/2009 10:33:18 AM
Yeah, there also is a SETI@Home team, that has four of the same 6 members as the climateprediction team. You can join multiple projects, and split computing resources between them, though. I think we should be able to generate some interest. We have 250 current students in the Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences Department that potentially are directly interested in this research. We also have over 1000 students in the Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering Department who are potentially interested in cost effective mitigation of climate change, which requires accurate large-scale climate models. Not to mention tens of thousands of other students and alumni who may be interested in climate change. I don't know if we will get 100, but we can definitely do better than 6.
8/23/2009 10:42:42 AM
the climate isn't changing. that is liberal propaganda being shoved down your throat.
8/23/2009 10:46:15 AM
Do you need to be in a particular time zone for your computer to be worthwhile to them?
8/23/2009 10:57:24 AM
Smath, I don't know if you are being serious or not, but the climate is definitely changing. The ten warmest years on record all occur within the 12-year period 1997-2008 (.http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/2008/) and that report was from NASA under the Bush administration. We also know that CO2 traps solar radiation in close to the Earth. That is basic science from laboratory experiments. We also know that humans activities have been emitting a good deal of CO2 for last couple of centuries. CO2 concentrations have risen by about 80 ppm (25%) since 1960, and by about 110 ppm (40%) since the dawn of the industrial revolution. I don't really understand where there is room for conspiracy. Sure, there are uncertainties, but that's what this modeling effort is trying to better understand. This is evidenced-based science, not politics or propaganda.
8/23/2009 10:57:34 AM
wolfpackgrrr, no it's actually a global effort based out of Oxford (I think). The model runs they send you all have a "report deadline", but all of mine have been in the summer of 2010, so it's not really an issue.
8/23/2009 10:59:24 AM
^^there isn't even agreement among scientists. I've heard global cooling, then global warming, and now some people are starting to talk about global cooling again. It's all a bunch of bunk that people are latching on to just to fund their labs and pockets. There is not a large enough data set to really tell one way or another... any graph of the past climate that you can produce shows spikes, valleys, etc that span hundreds or thousands of years. Do you really think that latching onto that famous CO2 graph that was started in what, the late 50's, early 60's, is statistically significant? Do you not realize that geologic time spans billions of years?
8/23/2009 11:10:43 AM
I joined. It's similar to one of my projects in high school, where I was collecting and compiling hundreds of pages of data to examine climate change. Makes me miss meteorology!!And hey, if climate *isn't* changing, then this model can help show how it isn't. Smath you should join to prove your point.[Edited on August 23, 2009 at 11:12 AM. Reason : ^]
8/23/2009 11:12:11 AM
8/23/2009 11:21:11 AM
We can't predict what the whether is going to do accurately more than 3 days in the future, what makes us think we can figure out what the climate is going to do 100 yrs from now.
8/23/2009 11:22:47 AM
8/23/2009 11:25:07 AM
http://www.gotwavs.com/php/sounds/?id=gog&media=WAVS&type=Movies&movie=Good_Morning_Vietnam"e=roosevelt.txt&file=roosevelt.wav]
8/23/2009 11:54:28 AM
quagmire bringing some reasonable perspective itt
8/23/2009 12:29:54 PM
8/23/2009 12:40:27 PM
8/23/2009 12:50:46 PM
this would only be similar to a roulette wheel if we did not understand how statistics or the roulette wheel worked. we may be experiencing global cooling right now, but we won't know until decades from now when media and politicians aren't trying to push global warming anymore.
8/23/2009 12:58:01 PM
eleusis, we (humans) currently emit about 50 billion metric tons of CO2-e every year. CO2 concentrations have risen over 40% since pre-industrial times leading to the highest CO2 concentrations the earth has seen in over 650,000 years. The last time CO2 concentrations were this high on earth, the poles were completely ice-free. Quite frankly, it is naive to think that the actions of 6.7 billion people cannot significantly affect the earth and it's habitability. The global consensus on the CFC's and the ozone layer proves otherwise.
8/23/2009 1:01:37 PM
eleusis, firstly there is no global cooling going on:
8/23/2009 1:06:05 PM
eleusis, you are dead wrong when you say it is the media and the politicians that are pushing this. They are the ones doing the most to prevent action on climate change. It is the scientists who are pushing action on this.Union of Concerned Scientists (http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/)
8/23/2009 1:26:56 PM
SilverTab, read the posting guidelines.
8/23/2009 1:39:26 PM
ibtsand ^
8/23/2009 1:42:25 PM
Silvertab, take your propaganda to Soap Box. the rebuttals to your rhetoric have been posted over and over and over again, so go there and read up before you start regurgitating shit.Also, there is global cooling going on. We have been getting progressively colder every year since 1998, even though our CO2 emissions have steadily increased. We won't know until decades from now what the actual causes of all this are. Keep that in mind before you decide to claim why someone is "dead wrong" three separate times when they make that statement.
8/23/2009 1:46:05 PM
Sorry, about the multiple posts. I didn't think to edit the post.eleusis, this is a flat out lie:
8/23/2009 1:54:59 PM
8/23/2009 2:09:59 PM
8/23/2009 2:13:44 PM
8/23/2009 2:14:57 PM
wheelman, I stand by the flat out lie statement. None of the researchers at Hadley would claim the earth has been cooling since 1998. They would just claim that 1998 was the hottest year on record. It's if your training for a race, and you received your fastest time in July, but have still been training for the last month and a half. You wouldn't say you've been getting slower, you'd say you haven't broken the record yet, which is what Hadley and NASA both say will happen in the next few years.eleusis, that was my mistake it should read "including 2005 the hottest year ever. And actually 2007 tied 1998 as the second warmest year on record ". I will edit shortly. The point still stands that scientists aren't claiming a global cooling trend since 1998.From the UK Met Office Hadley Centre (http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climatechange/guide/bigpicture/fact1.html)
8/23/2009 2:29:24 PM
You guys can argue about this topic until the cows come home. There are places that are warmer and there are places that are colder. If the ice caps fully melt, this will decrease the salinity of the world's oceans and change climates around the globe. There are both warming and cooling areas in the world.The point is, no, we don't have thousands or even hundreds of years of data to get a good idea of global climate trends. Global warming could very well lead to global cooling. We may or may not have a huge affect on this through our use of CFCs and CO2. But instead of bickering on the internet, which solves nothing and both sides can constantly quote various science information, we could help in the bettering of weather & climate prediction -- if not to prove one side wrong, then at least to better understand how our atmosphere works.This is not the Soap Box. I love reading arguments, it stimulates everyones' minds, but SilverTab was just asking for some support of your computers. <3 to all.
8/23/2009 2:46:15 PM
^AND THEN DENNIS QUAID WILL HAVE TO SAVE US ALL.give me a break
8/23/2009 4:09:56 PM
^^what assurance do I have that my computing resources won't be used to cook bad data using faulty formulas and models until it spits out a bullshit response that encourages more political intervention to a made up problem?
8/23/2009 4:39:14 PM
krneo1, thanks for the levelheaded response.
8/23/2009 5:32:25 PM
8/23/2009 5:45:17 PM
joined
8/23/2009 6:32:37 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=GB&hl=en-GB&v=mF_anaVcCXgGood stuff. SilverTab, this looks pretty cool. I will certainly give it some serious contemplation.
8/23/2009 6:33:45 PM
i joined
8/23/2009 6:57:31 PM
wheelman mentioned the UK Met Office Hadley Centre earlier, which is a pretty prestigious institute studying climate change, and it's actually their model that runs on your computer. They give you a few model years to run from 1980-2080, and then they run in 15 minute increments. You can also look at the results as they are calculated, including temperature, precipitation, and even cloud cover. It's a very in-depth model.
8/23/2009 7:06:48 PM
for Smath74:
8/23/2009 7:37:08 PM
Why waste CPU cycles on a model that has little chance of predicting future climate? They still haven't fixed the myriad cloud feedback issues outlined in Bony et al. (2006). Believe me when I say that the availability of computer power isn't the limiting factor in climate prediction research.[Edited on August 23, 2009 at 9:33 PM. Reason : typing FTL]
8/23/2009 9:12:23 PM
^ that sounds intelligent. i'm willing to believe italso, i never noticed how much of a crazy eleusis is
8/23/2009 9:30:41 PM
what exactly makes me crazy? is not buying into all the bullshit about climate what makes a person crazy?
8/23/2009 9:41:43 PM
yes.
8/23/2009 10:11:07 PM
I think all the resources and money spent chasing down global warming could be spent on something more relevant. I think pushing recycling and reducing waste is a more worthwhile endeavor.
8/23/2009 10:15:40 PM
you do realize that there are actual computer resources at this school that are used for problems like this:http://hpc.ncsu.edu
8/23/2009 11:33:40 PM
hey look, SilverTab's delusional.surprise surprise.
8/24/2009 12:16:31 AM
8/24/2009 9:03:24 AM
SilverTab, as a new user...please read over the site info: site.aspxDouble and triple posting are frowned upon. if you want to add to a post then an edit feature allows you to do so within a 30 minute time span.its a good idea to read over the posting guide lines at site_postguide.aspx
8/24/2009 9:49:22 AM
the earth supposedly heated up 0.7ºC in 1900's, and it has failed to get any hotter since. instead, it's gradually gotten cooler. the doomsayers are predicting that we should just wait to see a monstrously hot year happen in the next 2-3 years, but that prediction doesn't have any scientific basis to back it up. It's fearmongering, plain and simple.It's one thing to deny our actions have any consequences, but it's another issue altogether to claim that our consequences are always significant in the grand scheme of things. Trying to claim that the sky is falling because the volume of CO2 we produce boggles your mind is just as stupid as claiming that our actions are completely without consequence. As was said earlier in this thread, there are much more significant problems such as our need for improved recycling that can be addressed now, but that issue doesn't stand to make as much money for the big players as pushing green energy does.
8/24/2009 11:05:39 AM
to add to this debate in the "grand scheme of things" ... as you say regarding the consequences of our actions... http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/08/19/tech/main5253200.shtml
8/24/2009 11:29:37 AM
8/24/2009 11:43:03 AM