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When all the parameters have been entered, the model begins number-crunching, letting every variable interact and 'stew'. The model typically calculates the outcome for a 30-minute interval. But obviously, predicting the climate 30 minutes from now is pretty pointless, so the computer crunches for 30-minute intervals over a longer simulated period of time, typically 30 years. It advances the new data from the last 30-minute run into the next 30-minute run, and so on. Hence the need for powerful computers – a 30-year time period means over half a million 30-minute solutions for every location on the planet! At the end of the simulation, climatologists can analyse what effect occurred over specific areas, known as grids. |
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