Abstract

Abstract. Improving predictive understanding of Earth system variability and change requires data–model integration. Efficient data–model integration for complex models requires surrogate modeling to reduce model evaluation time. However, building a surrogate of a large-scale Earth system model (ESM) with many output variables is computationally intensive because it involves a large number of expensive ESM simulations. In this effort, we propose an efficient surrogate method capable of using a few ESM runs to build an accurate and fast-to-evaluate surrogate system of model outputs over large spatial and temporal domains. We first use singular value decomposition to reduce the output dimensions and then use Bayesian optimization techniques to generate an accurate neural network surrogate model based on limited ESM simulation samples. Our machine-learning-based surrogate methods can build and evaluate a large surrogate system of many variables quickly. Thus, whenever the quantities of interest change, such as a different objective function, a new site, and a longer simulation time, we can simply extract the information of interest from the surrogate system without rebuilding new surrogates, which significantly reduces computational efforts. We apply the proposed method to a regional ecosystem model to approximate the relationship between eight model parameters and 42 660 carbon flux outputs. Results indicate that using only 20 model simulations, we can build an accurate surrogate system of the 42 660 variables, wherein the consistency between the surrogate prediction and actual model simulation is 0.93 and the mean squared error is 0.02. This highly accurate and fast-to-evaluate surrogate system will greatly enhance the computational efficiency of data–model integration to improve predictions and advance our understanding of the Earth system.

Highlights

  • Improving predictive understanding of Earth system variability and change requires data–model integration

  • The goal of this study is to develop a surrogate method that builds an accurate surrogate system with small training data to reduce the computational costs of simulating expensive Earth system model (ESM)

  • We develop an singular value decomposition (SVD)-enhanced, Bayesianoptimized, and neural network (NN)-based surrogate method to improve the computational efficiency of large-scale surrogate modeling to advance model–data integration studies in Earth system model simulations

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Summary

Introduction

Improving predictive understanding of Earth system variability and change requires data–model integration. Data–model integration methods are usually computationally expensive, involving a large ensemble of model simulations, which prohibits their application to complex Earth system models (ESMs) with lengthy simulation time. Surrogate modeling is widely used (Razavi et al, 2012; Gong et al, 2015; Ray et al, 2015; Huang et al, 2016; Lu et al, 2018; Ricciuto et al, 2018). As ESM evaluation is expensive, it is desired to use a limited number of ESM simulation samples to build an accurate surrogate. As the surrogate model needs to be calculated many times in data–model integration, it is required to build a fast-to-evaluate surrogate.

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