Main Page

From Geos-chem
Revision as of 01:45, 15 December 2016 by Bmy (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

GEOS–Chem Wiki

GEOS-Chem Community Mission: to advance understanding of human and natural influences on the environment
through a comprehensive, state-of-the-science, readily accessible global model of atmospheric composition.

The GEOS–Chem model is a global 3-D model of atmospheric composition driven by assimilated meteorological observations from the Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) of the NASA Global Modeling and Assimilation Office. It is applied by research groups around the world to a wide range of atmospheric composition problems, Central management and support of the model is provided by the Atmospheric Chemistry Modeling Group at Harvard University.

This wiki is meant to facilitate communication between GEOS-Chem users and developers. If this is your first time here, check out the features page. If you would like to contribute to the wiki, please register as a user by clicking create account at the top right corner of this page.

New information is continually being added to the wiki, so please check back here often, or even better, subscribe to the recent changes' RSS feed: you will not miss a discussion!

Getting started w/ GEOS-Chem: Welcome letter for new users GEOS-Chem basics
Current public release: GEOS-Chem v10-01 v10-01 benchmark history
Version in development: GEOS-Chem v11-01 v11-01 benchmark history
Version for HPC environments: GEOS-Chem HP GEOS-Chem HP Dev Kit
List of publications: Refer to this page


General information about GEOS-Chem

Introduction and overview Steering Committee and working groups
Getting started with GEOS-Chem General technical information


GEOS-Chem Code Developers' Forums

Coding Diagnostics
Emissions Chemistry
Dynamics Deposition
Aerosols Met fields
Nested grid simulations Earth System Modeling Framework
Benchmarking and Evaluation Related projects


Reference Section

IDL GAMAP
Fortran Perl
R Python
NCAR Command Language (NCL) Wiki documentation