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{{Short description|Experimental numerical weather prediction model}}
{{unreferenced|date=February 2015}}
The '''Flow-following, finite-volume Icosahedral Model''' (FIM) is
The FIM
In November 2016, the ESRL announced it was no longer pursuing the FIM as a replacement for the GFS and would be instead developing the FV3, which uses some of the FIM's principles except on a square grid. The FIM will continue to be run for experimental purposes until FV3 commences. The FIM will also be upgraded with some of the same features as FV3 (retaining the icosahedral grid) and coupling to examine the use of the model in the longer ranges.
The FIM runs as a multiscale model, with a suffix number indicating the model's horizontal resolution. FIM7 operates at a spatial resolution of approximately 60 km, FIM8 at 30 km, FIM9 at 15 km and FIM9.5 at 10 km. Each scale runs on a temporal resolution of 6-hour steps. As of 2017, only the FIM7 (running out 10 days) and FIM8 (running out 14 days) continue to be run daily. The FIM7 also runs four runs between Tuesday and Wednesday each week as a [[climate model]], with the mean output from those runs issued in one-week intervals; it thus complements the [[Climate Forecast System]], the only other model in the U.S. government's arsenal that covers that time frame.
==References==
{{Reflist}}
==External links==
*[http://fim.noaa.gov/ Official FIM Web site], includes forecasts and documentation
{{Atmospheric, Oceanographic and Climate Models}}
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