Sudershan Gangrade: Analyzing a Flood of Data to Prepare for Climate Change

April 21, 2023

April 21, 2023 — Climate change often comes down to how it affects water, whether it’s for drinking, electricity generation, or how flooding affects people and infrastructure. To better understand these impacts, Oak Ridge National Laboratory water resources engineer Sudershan Gangrade is integrating knowledge ranging from large-scale climate projections to local meteorology and hydrology and using high-performance computing to create a holistic view of the future.

ORNL’s Sudershan Gangrade is using his water resources modeling expertise for a better understanding of flood risk and resilience strategies in a changing climate. Credit: Carlos Jones/ORNL, DOE.

In one of his recent projects, Gangrade conducted national-scale hydrologic modeling to study climate change effects on federal hydropower resources. The project analyzed 132 federal facilities that make up about 40% of the nation’s hydropower generation capacity.

To better predict how those facilities will be affected by climate extremes, Gangrade and his fellow researchers in ORNL’s Environmental Sciences Division translated global climate change predictions to impacts on local hydrology. The assessment used several models to look at future streamflow, hydropower operations and reservoir evaporation. The multiple-model approach provides insights to help federal hydropower facilities prepare for uncertainties in a changing climate, and will soon be expanded to nonfederal stakeholders.

“The hydrologic cycle is intensifying, and we can expect more extremes in the future,” Gangrade said. “This study provides helpful data for hydropower operators so they can better manage their reservoirs.”

Solutions for an Advanced Flood Warning System

In another project, Gangrade is helping create a global flood forecasting capability using a model called TRITON, or Two-dimensional Runoff and Inundation Toolkit for Operational Needs, for the U.S. Air Force. The tool, created by ORNL and Tennessee Technological University, incorporates precipitation and stream flow routing to simulate floods. The capability will be scaled to a 10-meter resolution, roughly the scale of a tennis court, to provide fine detail for researchers. Gangrade and colleagues have simulated several flood events such as Hurricane Harvey using TRITON, as well as other global flooding events.

Gangrade is also integrating machine learning methods to develop hybrid reservoir operation models. He is using machine learning to detect historical reservoir operation patterns and create better long-term water management simulations.

He will soon take on the role of principal investigator for a new project combining his expertise in hydroclimate assessments and inundation models to assess flood vulnerability for Department of Defense facilities. The ensemble-based flood modeling will be conducted using downscaled climate projections to help identify vulnerable infrastructures in current and future climate scenarios.

In the long term, Gangrade would like to see his efforts integrated into a real-time flood forecasting and early warning tool for the general population.

“Climate change is already leading to more extreme events. We’re likely to see an increase in flooding frequency as well as severity,” Gangrade said. “What we’re developing now at ORNL gives us a much better understanding of water dynamics in the future.”

The next step is to come up with a better warning system for society so people have more time to evacuate, for better emergency planning and response, and for solutions that can be put in place now to make communities more resilient, he said. “That’s where our inundation capability can come into play. It is a very efficient and accurate tool.”

Hometown Drought Sets a Career in Motion

It was an undergraduate experience studying a multi-year drought in central India involving his hometown of Ujjain that piqued Gangrade’s interest in hydrology and led him to pursue graduate degrees in the United States.

While studying environmental engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology (formerly the Indian School of Mines) in Dhanbad, he worked as an intern on a Clemson University-led project in India for two summers under a Society of Exploration Geophysicists program called Geoscientists Without Borders.

“That project introduced me to watershed hydrology and geophysics and applications for improving water resource sustainability,” Gangrade said. “It motivated me to eventually pursue graduate studies at Clemson,” where he earned a master’s degree in environmental engineering and science.

He then worked at a private environmental and geophysical consulting firm for a couple of years before coming to ORNL as a postmaster’s research associate in 2014.

While at ORNL, Gangrade earned his doctorate in environmental and climate sciences at the University of Tennessee where he was a fellow of the Bredesen Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education under the UT-Oak Ridge Innovation Institute.

Away from the lab, Gangrade enjoys playing the keyboard and spending time with his young son.

Big Science Teams Equipped with Big Science Tools

At ORNL, Gangrade said he enjoys the interdisciplinary environment that lets him collaborate with other researchers in climate and data science. “And then there’s the supercomputing here at ORNL,” he said. “There’s nowhere else that offers the kind of capabilities we have.”

His advice for scientists just starting out? “All of the science problems we’re challenged with are very interdisciplinary in nature,” he said. “So I would advise them to be aware of different disciplines and to get internship experiences in various science areas. Internships were a big help for me, as my experience with Clemson in India and then my work with the consulting firm played a big role in my career.”

Gangrade is motivated by what his work can mean to society at large. “Flooding impacts all of us,” he said. It can turn areas of water scarcity into flood zones like in California. “I like that my research can build sustainable solutions to help everyone.”

ORNL is managed by UT-Battelle for the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. DOE’s Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit energy.gov/science.


Source: Stephanie Seay, ORNL

Subscribe to HPCwire's Weekly Update!

Be the most informed person in the room! Stay ahead of the tech trends with industry updates delivered to you every week!

The Annual SCinet Mandala

November 30, 2023

Perhaps you have seen images of Tibetan Buddhists creating beautiful and intricate images with colored sand. These sand mandalas can take weeks to create, only to be ritualistically dismantled when the image is finished. Read more…

Alibaba Shuts Down its Quantum Computing Effort

November 30, 2023

In case you missed it, China’s e-commerce giant Alibaba has shut down its quantum computing research effort. It’s not entirely clear what drove the change. Reuters’ reported earlier this week that Alibaba “cut a Read more…

SC23: The Ethics of Supercomputing

November 29, 2023

Why should HPC practitioners care about ethics? And, what are our ethics in HPC? These questions were central to a lively discussion at the SC23 Birds-of-a-Feather (BoF) session: With Great Power Comes Great Responsib Read more…

Grace Hopper’s Big Debut in AWS Cloud While Graviton4 Launches

November 29, 2023

Editors Note: Additional Coverage of the AWS-Nvidia 65 Exaflop ‘Ultra-Cluster’ and Graviton4 can be found on our sister site Datanami. Amazon Web Services will soon be home to a new Nvidia-built supercomputer that Read more…

Give a Little (on Tuesday), Get a Lot

November 28, 2023

HPC is built on open source. While building HPC systems with "open plumbing" has enormous advantages, there can also be some challenges. As illustrated in the classic XKCD comic, the entire dependency tree of many usefu Read more…

AWS Solution Channel

Deploying AI/ML at the Edge with Omniflow’s Sustainable Smart Lamppost, NVIDIA, and AWS

Imagine a world where a lamppost does more than just illuminate streets; it actively contributes to a smarter, safer, and more sustainable community. Using Amazon Web Services (AWS) and NVIDIA technologies, Omniflow is turning this vision into a reality. Read more…

QCT Solution Channel

QCT and Intel Codeveloped QCT DevCloud Program to Jumpstart HPC and AI Development

Organizations and developers face a variety of issues in developing and testing HPC and AI applications. Challenges they face can range from simply having access to a wide variety of hardware, frameworks, and toolkits to time spent on installation, development, testing, and troubleshooting which can lead to increases in cost. Read more…

re:Invent 2023: AWS Talks a Little Quantum, Showcases Error Correction Progress

November 28, 2023

Quantum computing held sway in the last few minutes of AWS senior vice president Peter DeSantis’ keynote yesterday at the AWS re:Invent 2023 conference, being held in Las Vegas this week. While scarce on details, DeSan Read more…

The Annual SCinet Mandala

November 30, 2023

Perhaps you have seen images of Tibetan Buddhists creating beautiful and intricate images with colored sand. These sand mandalas can take weeks to create, only Read more…

SC23: The Ethics of Supercomputing

November 29, 2023

Why should HPC practitioners care about ethics? And, what are our ethics in HPC? These questions were central to a lively discussion at the SC23 Birds-of-a-Fe Read more…

Grace Hopper’s Big Debut in AWS Cloud While Graviton4 Launches

November 29, 2023

Editors Note: Additional Coverage of the AWS-Nvidia 65 Exaflop ‘Ultra-Cluster’ and Graviton4 can be found on our sister site Datanami. Amazon Web Service Read more…

Analyst Panel Says Take the Quantum Computing Plunge Now…

November 27, 2023

Should you start exploring quantum computing? Yes, said a panel of analysts convened at Tabor Communications HPC and AI on Wall Street conference earlier this y Read more…

SCREAM wins Gordon Bell Climate Prize at SC23

November 21, 2023

The first Gordon Bell Prize for Climate Modeling was presented at SC23 in Denver. The award went to a team led by Sandia National Laboratories that had develope Read more…

SC23 BOF: Inclusivity Progress and Challenges

November 21, 2023

New to SC23 was a series of talks on Inclusivity topics. Sponsored by the Inclusivity Committee and open to all conference attendees, these 90-minute birds-of-a Read more…

Supercomputing 2023: Odds and Ends from the Show

November 20, 2023

This year's fantastic Supercomputing 2023 was back in full form. Attendees seemed to be glad that the show was back in Denver, which was a preferred destination Read more…

Material Simulation with Quantum Accuracy Wins 2023 ACM Gordon Bell Prize

November 20, 2023

Accurately calculating interactions among electrons has been a significant obstacle to reliable material exploration and design through computer modeling. Recen Read more…

CORNELL I-WAY DEMONSTRATION PITS PARASITE AGAINST VICTIM

October 6, 1995

Ithaca, NY --Visitors to this year's Supercomputing '95 (SC'95) conference will witness a life-and-death struggle between parasite and victim, using virtual Read more…

SGI POWERS VIRTUAL OPERATING ROOM USED IN SURGEON TRAINING

October 6, 1995

Surgery simulations to date have largely been created through the development of dedicated applications requiring considerable programming and computer graphi Read more…

U.S. Will Relax Export Restrictions on Supercomputers

October 6, 1995

New York, NY -- U.S. President Bill Clinton has announced that he will definitely relax restrictions on exports of high-performance computers, giving a boost Read more…

Dutch HPC Center Will Have 20 GFlop, 76-Node SP2 Online by 1996

October 6, 1995

Amsterdam, the Netherlands -- SARA, (Stichting Academisch Rekencentrum Amsterdam), Academic Computing Services of Amsterdam recently announced that it has pur Read more…

Cray Delivers J916 Compact Supercomputer to Solvay Chemical

October 6, 1995

Eagan, Minn. -- Cray Research Inc. has delivered a Cray J916 low-cost compact supercomputer and Cray's UniChem client/server computational chemistry software Read more…

NEC Laboratory Reviews First Year of Cooperative Projects

October 6, 1995

Sankt Augustin, Germany -- NEC C&C (Computers and Communication) Research Laboratory at the GMD Technopark has wrapped up its first year of operation. Read more…

Sun and Sybase Say SQL Server 11 Benchmarks at 4544.60 tpmC

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- Sun Microsystems, Inc. and Sybase, Inc. recently announced the first benchmark results for SQL Server 11. The result represents a n Read more…

New Study Says Parallel Processing Market Will Reach $14B in 1999

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- A study by the Palo Alto Management Group (PAMG) indicates the market for parallel processing systems will increase at more than 4 Read more…

Leading Solution Providers

Contributors

SC23 Booth Videos

AMD @ SC23
AWS @ SC23
Altair @ SC23
CoolIT @ SC23
Cornelis Networks @ SC23
CoreHive @ SC23
DDC @ SC23
HPE @ SC23 with Justin Hotard
HPE @ SC23 with Trish Damkroger
Intel @ SC23
Intelligent Light @ SC23
Lenovo @ SC23
Penguin Solutions @ SC23
QCT Intel @ SC23
Tyan AMD @ SC23
Tyan Intel @ SC23
HPCwire LIVE from SC23 Playlist

CORNELL I-WAY DEMONSTRATION PITS PARASITE AGAINST VICTIM

October 6, 1995

Ithaca, NY --Visitors to this year's Supercomputing '95 (SC'95) conference will witness a life-and-death struggle between parasite and victim, using virtual Read more…

SGI POWERS VIRTUAL OPERATING ROOM USED IN SURGEON TRAINING

October 6, 1995

Surgery simulations to date have largely been created through the development of dedicated applications requiring considerable programming and computer graphi Read more…

U.S. Will Relax Export Restrictions on Supercomputers

October 6, 1995

New York, NY -- U.S. President Bill Clinton has announced that he will definitely relax restrictions on exports of high-performance computers, giving a boost Read more…

Dutch HPC Center Will Have 20 GFlop, 76-Node SP2 Online by 1996

October 6, 1995

Amsterdam, the Netherlands -- SARA, (Stichting Academisch Rekencentrum Amsterdam), Academic Computing Services of Amsterdam recently announced that it has pur Read more…

Cray Delivers J916 Compact Supercomputer to Solvay Chemical

October 6, 1995

Eagan, Minn. -- Cray Research Inc. has delivered a Cray J916 low-cost compact supercomputer and Cray's UniChem client/server computational chemistry software Read more…

NEC Laboratory Reviews First Year of Cooperative Projects

October 6, 1995

Sankt Augustin, Germany -- NEC C&C (Computers and Communication) Research Laboratory at the GMD Technopark has wrapped up its first year of operation. Read more…

Sun and Sybase Say SQL Server 11 Benchmarks at 4544.60 tpmC

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- Sun Microsystems, Inc. and Sybase, Inc. recently announced the first benchmark results for SQL Server 11. The result represents a n Read more…

New Study Says Parallel Processing Market Will Reach $14B in 1999

October 6, 1995

Mountain View, Calif. -- A study by the Palo Alto Management Group (PAMG) indicates the market for parallel processing systems will increase at more than 4 Read more…

  • arrow
  • Click Here for More Headlines
  • arrow
HPCwire