会议专题

Computational Modeling of Large Wildfires: A Roadmap

Wildland fire behavior, particularly that of large, uncontrolled wildfires, has not been well understood or predicted. Our methodology to simulate this phenomenon uses high-resolution dynamic models made of numerical weather prediction (NWP) models coupled to fire behavior models to simulate fire behavior. NWP models are capable of modeling very high resolution (< 100 m) atmospheric flows. The wildland fire component is based upon semi-empirical formulas for fireline rate of spread, post-frontal heat release, and a canopy fire. The fire behavior is coupled to the atmospheric model such that low level winds drive the spread of the surface fire, which in turn releases sensible heat, latent heat, and smoke fluxes into the lower atmosphere, feeding back to affect the winds directing the fire. These coupled dynamic models capture the rapid spread downwind, flank runs up canyons, bifurcations of the fire into two heads, and rough agreement in area, shape, and direction of spread at periods for which fire location data is available. Yet, intriguing computational science questions arise in applying such models in a predictive manner, including physical processes that span a vast range of scales, processes such as spotting that cannot be modeled deterministically, estimating the consequences of uncertainty, the efforts to steer simulations with field data (data assimilation), lingering issues with short term forecasting of weather that may show skill only on the order of a few hours, and the difficulty of gathering pertinent data for verification and initialization in a dangerous environment.

Numerical model weather prediction wildland fire model wildfire forest fire fire behavior

Janice L. Coen Craig C. Douglas

National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR Earth System Laboratory P. O. Box 3000, Boulder, Color School of Energy Resources and Mathematics Dept. University of Wyoming Laramie, Wyoming 82071-3036,

国际会议

第九届分布式计算及其应用国际学术研讨会

香港

英文

113-117

2010-08-12(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)