Portal Wissen : The Research Magazine of the University of Potsdam

Data assimilation? Stop! Don’t be afraid, please, come closer! No tongue twister, no rocket science. Or is it? Let’s see. It is a matter of fact, however, that data assimilation has been around for a long time and (almost) everywhere. But only in the age of supercomputers has it assumed amazing prop...

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Main Author: University Of Potsdam, Press
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Universität Potsdam 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25932/publishup-44257
https://publishup.uni-potsdam.de/44257
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description Data assimilation? Stop! Don’t be afraid, please, come closer! No tongue twister, no rocket science. Or is it? Let’s see. It is a matter of fact, however, that data assimilation has been around for a long time and (almost) everywhere. But only in the age of supercomputers has it assumed amazing proportions. Everyone knows data. Assimilation, however, is a difficult term for something that happens around us all the time: adaptation. Nature in particular has demonstrated to us for millions of years how evolutionary adaptation works. From unicellular organisms to primates, from algae to sequoias, from dinosaurs ... Anyone who cannot adapt will quickly not fit in anymore. We of course have also learned to adapt in new situations and act accordingly. When we want to cross the street, we have a plan of how to do this: go to the curb, look left and right, and only cross the street if there’s no car (coming). If we do all this and adapt our plan to the traffic we see, we will not just safely cross the street, but we will also have successfully practiced data assimilation. Of course, that sounds different when researchers try to explain how data assimilation helps them. Meteorologists, for example, have been working with data assimilation for years. The German Weather Service writes, “In numerical weather prediction, data assimilation is the approximation of a model run to the actual development of the atmosphere as described by existing observations.” What it means is that a weather forecast is only accurate if the model which is used for its calculation is repeatedly updated, i.e. assimilated, with new measurement data. In 2017 an entire Collaborative Research Center was established at the University of Potsdam, CRC 1294, to deal with the mathematical basics of data assimilation. For Portal Wissen, we asked the mathematicians and speakers of the CRC Prof. Sebastian Reich and Prof. Wilhelm Huisinga how exactly data assimilation works and in which areas of research they can be used profitably in the future. We have looked at two projects at the CRC itself: the analysis of eye movements and the research on space weather. In addition, the current issue is full of research projects that revolve around data in very different ways. Atmospheric physicist Markus Rex throws a glance at the spectacular MOSAiC expedition. Starting in September 2019, the German research icebreaker “Polarstern” will drift through the Arctic Ocean for a year and collect numerous data on ice, ocean, biosphere, and atmosphere. In the project “TraceAge”, nutritionists will use the data from thousands of subjects who participated in a long-term study to find out more about the function of trace elements in our body. Computer scientists have developed a method to filter relevant information from the flood of data on the worldwide web so as to enable visually impaired to surf the Internet more easily. And a geophysicist is working on developing an early warning system for volcanic eruptions from seemingly inconspicuous seismic data. Not least, this issue deals with the fascination of fire and ice, the possibilities that digitization offers for administration, and the question of how to inspire children for sports and exercise. We hope you enjoy reading – and if you send us some of your reading experience, we will assimilate it into our next issue. Promised! : Portal Wissen: The research magazine of the University of Potsdam [Englische Ausgabe], 02/2019
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author University Of Potsdam, Press
spellingShingle University Of Potsdam, Press
Portal Wissen : The Research Magazine of the University of Potsdam
author_facet University Of Potsdam, Press
author_sort University Of Potsdam, Press
title Portal Wissen : The Research Magazine of the University of Potsdam
title_short Portal Wissen : The Research Magazine of the University of Potsdam
title_full Portal Wissen : The Research Magazine of the University of Potsdam
title_fullStr Portal Wissen : The Research Magazine of the University of Potsdam
title_full_unstemmed Portal Wissen : The Research Magazine of the University of Potsdam
title_sort portal wissen : the research magazine of the university of potsdam
publisher Universität Potsdam
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25932/publishup-44257
https://publishup.uni-potsdam.de/44257
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op_rights Keine Nutzungslizenz vergeben - es gilt das deutsche Urheberrecht
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25932/publishup-44257
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spelling ftdatacite:10.25932/publishup-44257 2023-05-15T15:19:55+02:00 Portal Wissen : The Research Magazine of the University of Potsdam University Of Potsdam, Press 2020 application/pdf application/zip https://dx.doi.org/10.25932/publishup-44257 https://publishup.uni-potsdam.de/44257 en eng Universität Potsdam Keine Nutzungslizenz vergeben - es gilt das deutsche Urheberrecht http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0 PublicationIssue article Journal Issue Text 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25932/publishup-44257 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Data assimilation? Stop! Don’t be afraid, please, come closer! No tongue twister, no rocket science. Or is it? Let’s see. It is a matter of fact, however, that data assimilation has been around for a long time and (almost) everywhere. But only in the age of supercomputers has it assumed amazing proportions. Everyone knows data. Assimilation, however, is a difficult term for something that happens around us all the time: adaptation. Nature in particular has demonstrated to us for millions of years how evolutionary adaptation works. From unicellular organisms to primates, from algae to sequoias, from dinosaurs ... Anyone who cannot adapt will quickly not fit in anymore. We of course have also learned to adapt in new situations and act accordingly. When we want to cross the street, we have a plan of how to do this: go to the curb, look left and right, and only cross the street if there’s no car (coming). If we do all this and adapt our plan to the traffic we see, we will not just safely cross the street, but we will also have successfully practiced data assimilation. Of course, that sounds different when researchers try to explain how data assimilation helps them. Meteorologists, for example, have been working with data assimilation for years. The German Weather Service writes, “In numerical weather prediction, data assimilation is the approximation of a model run to the actual development of the atmosphere as described by existing observations.” What it means is that a weather forecast is only accurate if the model which is used for its calculation is repeatedly updated, i.e. assimilated, with new measurement data. In 2017 an entire Collaborative Research Center was established at the University of Potsdam, CRC 1294, to deal with the mathematical basics of data assimilation. For Portal Wissen, we asked the mathematicians and speakers of the CRC Prof. Sebastian Reich and Prof. Wilhelm Huisinga how exactly data assimilation works and in which areas of research they can be used profitably in the future. We have looked at two projects at the CRC itself: the analysis of eye movements and the research on space weather. In addition, the current issue is full of research projects that revolve around data in very different ways. Atmospheric physicist Markus Rex throws a glance at the spectacular MOSAiC expedition. Starting in September 2019, the German research icebreaker “Polarstern” will drift through the Arctic Ocean for a year and collect numerous data on ice, ocean, biosphere, and atmosphere. In the project “TraceAge”, nutritionists will use the data from thousands of subjects who participated in a long-term study to find out more about the function of trace elements in our body. Computer scientists have developed a method to filter relevant information from the flood of data on the worldwide web so as to enable visually impaired to surf the Internet more easily. And a geophysicist is working on developing an early warning system for volcanic eruptions from seemingly inconspicuous seismic data. Not least, this issue deals with the fascination of fire and ice, the possibilities that digitization offers for administration, and the question of how to inspire children for sports and exercise. We hope you enjoy reading – and if you send us some of your reading experience, we will assimilate it into our next issue. Promised! : Portal Wissen: The research magazine of the University of Potsdam [Englische Ausgabe], 02/2019 Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Arctic Ocean