We gratefully acknowledge support from
the Simons Foundation and member institutions.
Full-text links:

Download:

Current browse context:

physics.ao-ph

Change to browse by:

References & Citations

Bookmark

(what is this?)
CiteULike logo BibSonomy logo Mendeley logo del.icio.us logo Digg logo Reddit logo

Physics > Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics

Title: ORBIT: Oak Ridge Base Foundation Model for Earth System Predictability

Abstract: Earth system predictability is challenged by the complexity of environmental dynamics and the multitude of variables involved. Current AI foundation models, although advanced by leveraging large and heterogeneous data, are often constrained by their size and data integration, limiting their effectiveness in addressing the full range of Earth system prediction challenges. To overcome these limitations, we introduce the Oak Ridge Base Foundation Model for Earth System Predictability (ORBIT), an advanced vision-transformer model that scales up to 113 billion parameters using a novel hybrid tensor-data orthogonal parallelism technique. As the largest model of its kind, ORBIT surpasses the current climate AI foundation model size by a thousandfold. Performance scaling tests conducted on the Frontier supercomputer have demonstrated that ORBIT achieves 230 to 707 PFLOPS, with scaling efficiency maintained at 78% to 96% across 24,576 AMD GPUs. These breakthroughs establish new advances in AI-driven climate modeling and demonstrate promise to significantly improve the Earth system predictability.
Subjects: Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics (physics.ao-ph); Artificial Intelligence (cs.AI); Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing (cs.DC); Image and Video Processing (eess.IV); Geophysics (physics.geo-ph)
Cite as: arXiv:2404.14712 [physics.ao-ph]
  (or arXiv:2404.14712v1 [physics.ao-ph] for this version)

Submission history

From: Xiao Wang [view email]
[v1] Tue, 23 Apr 2024 03:39:57 GMT (3173kb,D)

Link back to: arXiv, form interface, contact.