6 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
The CMIP5 model and simulation documentation: a new standard for climate modelling metadata
The common information model for climate modelling digital repositories: The metafor project
A poster highlighting the common information model for climate modelling digital repositorie
Recommended from our members
The METAFOR project: preserving data through metadata standards for climate models and simulations
Climate modeling is a complex process, requiring accurate and complete metadata in order to identify, assess and use climate data stored in digital repositories. The preservation of such data is increasingly important given the development of ever-increasingly complex models to predict the effects of global climate change.
The EU METAFOR project has developed a Common
Information Model (CIM) to describe climate data and the models and modelling environments that produce this data. There is a wide degree of variability between different climate models and modelling groups. To accommodate this, the CIM has been designed to be highly generic and flexible, with extensibility built in. METAFOR describes the climate modelling process simply as "an activity undertaken using software on computers to produce data." This process has been described as separate UML packages (and, ultimately, XML schemas). This fairly generic structure canbe paired with more specific "controlled vocabularies" in order to
restrict the range of valid CIM instances.
The CIM will aid digital preservation of climate models as it will provide an accepted standard structure for the model metadata.
Tools to write and manage CIM instances, and to allow
convenient and powerful searches of CIM databases,. Are also
under development. Community buy-in of the CIM has been
achieved through a continual process of consultation with the climate modelling community, and through the METAFOR team’s development of a questionnaire that will be used to collect the metadata for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) model runs
Supporting the climate community by providing common metadata for climate modelling digital repositories: The metafor project
A poster to highlight common metadata for climate modelling repositories to support the climate community.
There is more interest than ever in the results of climate models; users are no longer limited to the scientific and academic communities, and can now be found in as diverse areas as local government, policy and the general public.
Climate modeling is a complex process, which requires accurate and complete metadata (data describing data) in order to identify, assess and use the climate data stored in digital repositories and made available to these users