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PISM: Parallel Ice Sheet Model

By Andy Aschwanden (primary-developer)1, Constantine Khroulev (primary-developer)1, Thorsten Albrecht (primary-developer)2, Julius Garbe (primary-developer)2, Mortiz Kreuzer (primary-developer)2, Ronja Rees (primary-developer)2, Maria Zeitz (primary-developer)2, Jed Brown, Ed Bueler, Johannes Feldmann, Marianne Haseloff, Anders Levermann, Craig Lingle, Maria Martin, David Maxwell, Matthias Mengel, Julien Seguinot, Ricarda Winkelmamn

1. University of Alaska Fairbanks 2. Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research

Published on

Description

The Parallel Ice Sheet Model (PISM) is an open-source modelling framework for ice sheets and glaciers. It is parallel, thermodynamically-coupled and capable of high resolution. PISM has been widely adopted as a tool for doing science for about twenty years now. The latest stable release is PISM v2.1.

Support

If you are looking for help with PISM, feel free to join the PISM workspace on Slack. You can also contact the developers team directly or write an e-mail to uaf-pism@alaska.edu. To fetch our latest news or get in touch with us, follow us on Twitter!

See PISM website.

Sponsored by

Development of PISM is supported by NASA grants 20-CRYO2020-0052 and 80NSSC22K0274 and NSF grant OAC-2118285.

Credits

PISM is jointly developed at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks (UAF) and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). UAF developers are based in the Glaciers Group at the UAF Geophysical Institute. For more about the team see the developers team page.