21 research outputs found
Connecting Land–Atmosphere Interactions to Surface Heterogeneity in CHEESEHEAD19
The Chequamegon Heterogeneous Ecosystem Energy-Balance Study Enabled by a High-Density Extensive Array of Detectors 2019 (CHEESEHEAD19) is an ongoing National Science Foundation project based on an intensive field campaign that occurred from June to October 2019. The purpose of the study is to examine how the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) responds to spatial heterogeneity in surface energy fluxes. One of the main objectives is to test whether lack of energy balance closure measured by eddy covariance (EC) towers is related to mesoscale atmospheric processes. Finally, the project evaluates data-driven methods for scaling surface energy fluxes, with the aim to improve model–data comparison and integration. To address these questions, an extensive suite of ground, tower, profiling, and airborne instrumentation was deployed over a 10 km × 10 km domain of a heterogeneous forest ecosystem in the Chequamegon–Nicolet National Forest in northern Wisconsin, United States, centered on an existing 447-m tower that anchors an AmeriFlux/NOAA supersite (US-PFa/WLEF). The project deployed one of the world’s highest-density networks of above-canopy EC measurements of surface energy fluxes. This tower EC network was coupled with spatial measurements of EC fluxes from aircraft; maps of leaf and canopy properties derived from airborne spectroscopy, ground-based measurements of plant productivity, phenology, and physiology; and atmospheric profiles of wind, water vapor, and temperature using radar, sodar, lidar, microwave radiometers, infrared interferometers, and radiosondes. These observations are being used with large-eddy simulation and scaling experiments to better understand submesoscale processes and improve formulations of subgrid-scale processes in numerical weather and climate models
Automatically Harnessing Sparse Acceleration
Sparse linear algebra is central to many scientific programs, yet compilers
fail to optimize it well. High-performance libraries are available, but
adoption costs are significant. Moreover, libraries tie programs into
vendor-specific software and hardware ecosystems, creating non-portable code.
In this paper, we develop a new approach based on our specification Language
for implementers of Linear Algebra Computations (LiLAC). Rather than requiring
the application developer to (re)write every program for a given library, the
burden is shifted to a one-off description by the library implementer. The
LiLAC-enabled compiler uses this to insert appropriate library routines without
source code changes.
LiLAC provides automatic data marshaling, maintaining state between calls and
minimizing data transfers. Appropriate places for library insertion are
detected in compiler intermediate representation, independent of source
languages.
We evaluated on large-scale scientific applications written in FORTRAN;
standard C/C++ and FORTRAN benchmarks; and C++ graph analytics kernels. Across
heterogeneous platforms, applications and data sets we show speedups of
1.1 to over 10 without user intervention.Comment: Accepted to CC 202
Regulation of Exocytosis and Fusion Pores by Synaptotagmin-Effector Interactions
Synaptotagmin isoforms and mutants altered fusion event frequency and fusion pore transitions. These effects showed a strong correlation with PS binding, but not with SNARE binding. Synaptotagmin-PS interaction thus function in two distinct kinetic steps in Ca2+ triggered exocytosis, and stabilize open fusion pores