Comment on egusphere-2023-3045

C. Efstathiou(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Elizabeth Adams(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Carlie J. Coats(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Robert Zelt(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Mark S. Reed(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), John McGee(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Kristen M. Foley(Environmental Protection Agency), Fahim Sidi(Environmental Protection Agency), David C. Wong(Environmental Protection Agency), Steven Fine(Environmental Protection Agency), Saravanan Arunachalam(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Unknown
April 21, 2024
Cited by 0Open Access
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Abstract

<strong class="journal-contentHeaderColor">Abstract.</strong> The Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) Model is a local-to-hemispheric scale numerical air quality modeling system developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and supported by the Center for Community Modeling and Analysis System (CMAS). CMAQ is used for regulatory purposes by the USEPA program offices and state and local air agencies, and is also widely used by the broader global research community to simulate and understand complex air quality processes and for computational environmental fate and transport, and climate and health impact studies. Leveraging state-of-the-science cloud computing resources for high performance computing (HPC) applications, CMAQ is now available as a fully tested, publicly available technology stack (HPC cluster and software stack) for two major cloud service providers (CSPs). Specifically, CMAQ configurations and supporting materials have been developed for use on their HPC clusters, including extensive online documentation, tutorials, and guidelines to scale and optimize air quality simulations using their services. These resources allow modelers to rapidly bring together CMAQ, cloud-hosted datasets, and visualization and evaluation tools on ephemeral clusters that can be deployed quickly and reliably worldwide. Described here are considerations in CMAQ v5.3.3 cloud use and the supported resources for each CSP, presented through a benchmark application suite that was developed as an example of typical simulation for testing and verifying components of the modeling system. The outcomes of this effort are to provide findings from performing CMAQ simulations on the cloud using popular vendor provided resources, to enable the user community to adapt this for their own needs and identify specific areas of potential optimization with respect to storage and compute architectures.


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