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A Wildland Fire Model with Data Assimilation for High Performance Computing Environments
------------------------------------------------------------ Joint Seminar ============================================================ The Hong Kong University of Science & Technology Department of Computer Science and Engineering and Department of Mathematics ------------------------------------------------------------ Speaker: Professor Craig C. DOUGLAS Departments of Computer Science University of Kentucky and Yale University Title: "A Wildland Fire Model with Data Assimilation for High Performance Computing Environments" Date: Monday, 17 March 2008 Time: 4:00pm - 5:00pm Venue: Lecture Theatre F (Leung Yat Sing Lecture Theatre, near lifts 25/26) HKUST Abstract: A wildfire model is formulated based on balance equations for energy and fuel, where the fuel loss due to combustion corresponds to the fuel reaction rate. The resulting coupled partial differential equations have coefficients that can be approximated from prior measurements of wildfires. An Ensemble Kalman Filter technique is then used to assimilate temperatures measured at selected points into running wildfire simulations. The assimilation technique is able to modify the simulations to track the measurements correctly even if the simulations were started with an erroneous ignition location that is quite far away from the correct one. This model is part of a dynamic data-driven application system (DDDAS). Such systems tax high performance computing systems and networks in ways that are nontraditional for supercomputer centers. How a DDDAS does so will be described in our context. This is joint work with Lynn S. Bennethum, Jonathan D. Beezley, Minjeong Kim, Jan Mandel, Janice L. Coen and Anthony Vodacek. ****************** Biography: Professor DOUGLAS is a professor of computer science and mechanical engineering at the University of Kentucky (Lexington, KY, USA). He is also a senior research scientist of computer science at Yale University (New Haven, CT, USA). During academic year 2007-2008 he is a visiting professor of mathematics and computer science at Texas A&M University (College Station, TX, USA). Prof. DOUGLAS holds a Ph.D. from Yale University. He has worked at Duke University (Durham, NC, USA) and IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center (Yorktown Heights, NY, USA) in the past. He maintains http://www.mgnet.org/ and http://www.dddas.org/.