Editing Talk:1885: Ensemble Model

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Ensemble models are a form of a Monte Carlo Analysis.  They are used in many engineering analyses, usually to determine an upper limit for some particular limiting quantity.  The idea is that you do not necessarily believe any of the individual analyses, but that the ensemble forms an envelope of outcomes, so that if you design for the most extreme case, you can be confident that your design will not fail.  They are used to make sure that the design is robust and has margin to failure.  Of course, you cannot consider all of the uncertainties, which is why it is important to carefully identify sources of uncertainty before you do the analyses.  If you do generate an ensemble envelope, and the data for the particular event falls outside the envelope, it is time to seriously reconsider the models, or the sources of uncertainty.13:20, 7 September 2017 (UTC)~~
 
Ensemble models are a form of a Monte Carlo Analysis.  They are used in many engineering analyses, usually to determine an upper limit for some particular limiting quantity.  The idea is that you do not necessarily believe any of the individual analyses, but that the ensemble forms an envelope of outcomes, so that if you design for the most extreme case, you can be confident that your design will not fail.  They are used to make sure that the design is robust and has margin to failure.  Of course, you cannot consider all of the uncertainties, which is why it is important to carefully identify sources of uncertainty before you do the analyses.  If you do generate an ensemble envelope, and the data for the particular event falls outside the envelope, it is time to seriously reconsider the models, or the sources of uncertainty.13:20, 7 September 2017 (UTC)~~
 
;…rain is 0.5% more likely in some areas
 
I have removed this because it's not accurate. This comic refers to the {{w|Universe (mathematics)}} and this outcome is high realistic.
 
:''Historical rain data are used to estimate the probability of rainstorms of a certain size and duration occurring, e.g. the {{w|Flood Studies Report|Flood Studies Report}} in the UK. Randall here is suggesting that an alternate universe exists where these estimates are higher (and presumably lower) in some areas, and that the estimates of rainfall in this alternate universe is accounted for within ensemble modelling in our own universe. This sort of change in prediction is frequently used when accounting for 'worst case scenarios' in the design processes of structures such as dams. However, the figures to the left appear to indicate time-dependent models, which are typically physics based, e.g. {{w|Large eddy simulation|Large Eddy Simulation}} models or other atmospheric process based models. In those sorts of models, likelihood of rain is usually a prediction rather than a parameter, but might be used as a parameter in a second iteration.''
 
Check my more realistic explanations on the first three outcomes, they are no jokes.--[[User:Dgbrt|Dgbrt]] ([[User talk:Dgbrt|talk]]) 15:01, 7 September 2017 (UTC)
 
 
Pretty sure this has nothing to do with the mathematician's notion of universe - the math notion is used to dodge set-theoretic problems, but crucially everything one does is supposed to not depend on the specific choice of a universe (it may depend on the existence of one...). This is exactly not how the word is used here. [[Special:Contributions/162.158.90.102|162.158.90.102]] 09:46, 10 September 2017 (UTC)
 

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