9. Glossary
- CCPA
Climatology-Calibrated Precipitation Analysis (CCPA) data. This data is required for METplus precipitation verification tasks within the SRW App. The most recent 8 days worth of data are publicly available and can be accessed here.
- CCPP
The Common Community Physics Package is a forecast-model agnostic, vetted collection of codes containing atmospheric physical parameterizations and suites of parameterizations for use in Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) along with a framework that connects the physics to the host forecast model.
- chgres_cube
The preprocessing software used to create initial condition files to “coldstart” the forecast model. The initial conditions are created from either GFS GRIB2 or NEMSIO data.
- CIME
The Common Infrastructure for Modeling the Earth (CIME - pronounced “SEAM”) provides a Case Control System for configuring, compiling and executing Earth system models, data and stub model components, a driver and associated tools and libraries.
- Component
A software element that has a clear function and interface. In Earth system models, components are often single portions of the Earth system (e.g. atmosphere, ocean, or land surface) that are assembled to form a whole.
- Compset
- Compsets
A component set. It refers to a particular mix of components, along with a component-specific configuration and/or namelist settings”.
- CONUS
Continental United States
- Coupled
- Coupled model
- Coupled models
A coupled model joins two or more weather or climate model components into one larger Earth systems model for more accurate predictions. Fully-coupled models contain an atmospheric model, an ocean model, a land model, and a sea ice model.
- Dynamical core
Global atmospheric model based on fluid dynamics principles, including Euler’s equations of motion.
- echo top
The radar-indicated top of an area of precipitation. Specifically, it contains the height of the 18 dBZ reflectivity value.
- FMS
The Flexible Modeling System (FMS) is a software framework for supporting the efficient development, construction, execution, and scientific interpretation of atmospheric, oceanic, and climate system models.
- free-forecast
Free-forecast mode means that the application is running without data assimilation/data cycling capabilities.
- FV3
The Finite-Volume Cubed-Sphere Dynamical Core (dycore). Developed at NOAA’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL), it is a scalable and flexible dycore capable of both hydrostatic and non-hydrostatic atmospheric simulations. It is the dycore used in the UFS Weather Model.
- GFS
Global Forecast System. The GFS is a National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) weather forecast model that generates data for dozens of atmospheric and land-soil variables, including temperatures, winds, precipitation, soil moisture, and atmospheric ozone concentration. The system couples four separate models (atmosphere, ocean model, land/soil model, and sea ice) that work together to accurately depict weather conditions.
- GRIB2
The second version of the World Meterological Organization’s (WMO) standard for distributing gridded data.
- HPC-Stack
The HPC-Stack is a repository that provides a unified, shell script-based build system for building the software stack required for numerical weather prediction (NWP) tools such as the Unified Forecast System (UFS) and the Joint Effort for Data assimilation Integration (JEDI) framework.
- IC
- ICs
Initial conditions
- MRMS
Multi-Radar/Multi-Sensor (MRMS) System Analysis data. This data is required for METplus composite reflectivity or echo top verification tasks within the SRW App. A two-day archive of precipitation, radar, and aviation and severe weather fields is publicly available and can be accessed here.
- MPI
MPI stands for Message Passing Interface. An MPI is a standardized communication system used in parallel programming. It establishes portable and efficient syntax for the exchange of messages and data between multiple processors that are used by a single computer program. An MPI is required for high-performance computing (HPC).
- NAM
North American Mesoscale Forecast System. NAM generates multiple grids (or domains) of weather forecasts over the North American continent at various horizontal resolutions. Each grid contains data for dozens of weather parameters, including temperature, precipitation, lightning, and turbulent kinetic energy. NAM uses additional numerical weather models to generate high-resolution forecasts over fixed regions, and occasionally to follow significant weather events like hurricanes.
- NCAR
- NCEP
National Centers for Environmental Prediction, an arm of the National Weather Service.
- NCEPLIBS
The NCEP library source code and utilities required for chgres_cube, the UFS Weather Model, and UPP.
- NCEPLIBS-external
A collection of third-party libraries required to build NCEPLIBS, chgres_cube, the UFS Weather Model, and UPP.
- NCL
An interpreted language designed specifically for scientific data analysis and visualization. More information can be found at https://www.ncl.ucar.edu.
- NDAS
NAM Data Assimilation System (NDAS) data. This data is required for METplus surface and upper-air verification tasks within the SRW App. The most recent 1-2 days worth of data are publicly available in PrepBufr format and can be accessed here. The most recent 8 days of data can be accessed here.
- NEMS
The NOAA Environmental Modeling System - a software infrastructure that supports NCEP/EMC’s forecast products.
- NEMSIO
A binary format for atmospheric model output on the native gaussian grid.
- NetCDF
A set of software libraries and machine-independent data formats that supports the creation, access, and sharing of array-oriented scientific data.
- NWP
- Numerical Weather Prediction
Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) takes current observations of weather and processes them with computer models to forecast the future state of the weather.
- Repository
A central location in which files (e.g., data, code, documentation) are stored and managed.
- spack-stack
The spack-stack is a collaborative effort between the NOAA Environmental Modeling Center (EMC), the UCAR Joint Center for Satellite Data Assimilation (JCSDA), and the Earth Prediction Innovation Center (EPIC). spack-stack is a repository that provides a Spack-based method for building the software stack required for numerical weather prediction (NWP) tools such as the Unified Forecast System (UFS) and the Joint Effort for Data assimilation Integration (JEDI) framework. spack-stack uses the Spack package manager along with custom Spack configuration files and Python scripts to simplify installation of the libraries required to run various applications. The spack-stack can be installed on a range of platforms and comes pre-configured for many systems. Users can install the necessary packages for a particular application and later add the missing packages for another application without having to rebuild the entire stack.
- Stochastic physics
A package of stochastic schemes used to represent model uncertainty: SKEB (Stochastic Kinetic Energy Backscatter), SPPT (Stochastically Perturbed Physics Tendencies), and SHUM (Specific Humidity)
- Suite
A collection of primary physics schemes and interstitial schemes that are known to work well together
- UFS
A Unified Forecast System (UFS) is a community-based, coupled comprehensive Earth system modeling system. The UFS numerical applications span local to global domains and predictive time scales from sub-hourly analyses to seasonal predictions. It is designed to support the Weather Enterprise and to be the source system for NOAA’s operational numerical weather prediction applications
- Umbrella repository
A repository that houses external code, or “externals,” from additional repositories.
- Uncoupled
- Uncoupled model
- Uncoupled models
An uncoupled model contains just one weather or climate model, unlike coupled models, which bundle together two or more different weather/climate model components.
- UPP
The Unified Post Processor is software developed at NCEP and used operationally for models maintained by NCEP. The UPP processes raw model output from a variety of NCEP’s NWP models, including the FV3.
- Weather Enterprise
Individuals and organizations from public, private, and academic sectors that contribute to the research, development, and production of weather forecast products; primary consumers of these weather forecast products.
- Weather Model
A prognostic model that can be used for short- and medium-range research and operational forecasts. It can be an atmosphere-only model or be an atmospheric model coupled with one or more additional components, such as a wave or ocean model.