The National Academies hosts a workshop on the use of digital twins in atmospheric, climate, and sustainability science on February 1st and 2nd, 2023. Speakers and panelists include Mike Goodchild (University of California – Santa Barbara), Venkatramani Balaji (Schmidt Futures), Amy McGovern (University of Oklahoma), Anima Anandkumar (California Institute of Technology), and many others, to discuss the definition of a digital twin and its applications.
An emerging technology with the potential to revolutionize atmospheric, climate, and sustainability science, digital twins can be used to create global-scale interactive models of Earth, and enhance climate and weather predictions. Further, Digital Twins in Atmospheric, Climate, and Sustainability Science focuses on key technical challenges for developing and utilizing digital twins, including issues related to artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), big data, and data assimilation.
(Source: The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine)
ClimaTwin® is a leading climate risk intelligence solution for infrastructure assets and the built environment.
We empower infrastructure stakeholders to mitigate climate risks and assess adaptation actions across the total asset lifecycle. By connecting complex climate models and infrastructure digital twins, our solution enables engineers, owner-operators, and governments to aggregate, visualize, and analyze disparate datasets, revealing site-specific insights at a hyper-local scale. Benefits include 5-10x near-term returns and lifetime cost-avoidance by mitigating risks to systems, services, and societies.
To learn more about climate risk intelligence for your infrastructure assets, please visit www.climatwin.com today.
The National Academies hosts a workshop on the use of digital twins in atmospheric, climate, and sustainability science on February 1st and 2nd, 2023. Speakers and panelists include Mike Goodchild (University of California – Santa Barbara), Venkatramani Balaji (Schmidt Futures), Amy McGovern (University of Oklahoma), Anima Anandkumar (California Institute of Technology), and many others, to discuss the definition of a digital twin and its applications.
An emerging technology with the potential to revolutionize atmospheric, climate, and sustainability science, digital twins can be used to create global-scale interactive models of Earth, and enhance climate and weather predictions. Further, Digital Twins in Atmospheric, Climate, and Sustainability Science focuses on key technical challenges for developing and utilizing digital twins, including issues related to artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), big data, and data assimilation.
(Source: The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine)
ClimaTwin® is a leading climate risk intelligence solution for infrastructure assets and the built environment.
We empower infrastructure stakeholders to mitigate climate risks and assess adaptation actions across the total asset lifecycle. By connecting complex climate models and infrastructure digital twins, our solution enables engineers, owner-operators, and governments to aggregate, visualize, and analyze disparate datasets, revealing site-specific insights at a hyper-local scale. Benefits include 5-10x near-term returns and lifetime cost-avoidance by mitigating risks to systems, services, and societies.
To learn more about climate risk intelligence for your infrastructure assets, please visit www.climatwin.com today.
The 2021 ASCE International Conference on Computing in Civil Engineering (i3CE 2021) is from September 12th to September 14th. Hosted by the University of Florida, the i3CE 2021 conference is at the Embassy Suites Lake Buena Vista South, nearby Walt Disney World.
The theme of this year’s conference is IT for Smart Infrastructure and Communities, featuring sessions on visualization, information modeling and digital twin technology, simulation and process modeling, reality capture technologies (LIDAR, RGB-D, vision), big data and sensing, and numerous other topics.
Further, the i3CE 2021 conference invites scientific contributions from all emerging areas of computing across the architecture-engineering-construction-owner (AECO) industry. i3CE 2021 committees include the University of Florida Local Organizing Committee and The International Scientific Committee.
During the conference, computing themes and topics address the following computing technical areas and computing application contexts:
Computing Technical Areas
Visualization (nD,VR, AR)
Information modeling and Digital Twin Technology (BIM, BrIM, CIM, GIS)