extended time scale

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extended time scale

The simulation runs on an extended time scale to model centuries of climate change.

Definition

Noun A simulation time scale where events are processed or displayed slower than real time. This occurs when the time-scale factor (the ratio of simulation time to real time) is greater than one, meaning a short period of real time represents a longer period within the simulated system.

Usage

This term is used primarily in the context of computer simulations, data processing, and modeling. It describes a mode where the simulation's internal clock runs faster than the wall-clock time, allowing users to observe long-term processes in a shorter real-time duration.

Examples
  • The climate model ran on an extended time scale, simulating 100 years of planetary warming in just 10 hours of computation.
  • To analyze the long-term economic effects, the researchers processed the data on an extended time scale.
  • Using an extended time scale in the simulation allowed us to quickly observe the galaxy's evolution over millions of years.
Advanced Usage
  • Conceptual Extension: While technical, the concept can be applied metaphorically to describe any analytical process that compresses a long sequence of events into a shorter period for review.
    • The documentary used archival footage to present the century's history on an extended time scale, fitting it into a two-hour film.
Variants and Related Words
  • Time-Scale Factor (n): The numerical ratio of simulated time to real processing time. An extended time scale has a time-scale factor > 1.
  • Fast-Time Simulation (n): A synonym often used in engineering and training contexts, describing a simulation running on an extended time scale.
  • Compressed-Time Scale (n): A related but sometimes distinct concept where events are sped up uniformly for observation, common in video playback or certain simulations.
Synonyms
  • Fast-time simulation
  • Accelerated time scale (Note: This can be ambiguous, as it sometimes refers to the within the simulation, not the processing scale.)
Antonyms
  • Real-time scale: Time-scale factor equals one.
  • Slowed time scale / Retarded time scale: Time-scale factor is less than one, where simulation runs slower than real time.
extended time scale

The simulation runs on an extended time scale to model centuries of climate change.

Noun
  1. (simulation) the time scale used in data processing when the time-scale factor is greater than one

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