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Umt Qcfire 7.3 - Download

Umt Qcfire 7.3 - Download

UM‑T QCFire 7.3: Features, Installation, and Evaluation of a High‑Performance Fire‑Spread Simulator

docker pull umtcfire/qcfire:7.3 docker run --gpus all -it umtcfire/qcfire:7.3 qcfire --version | Check | Command | Expected Outcome | |---|---|---| | Core binary | qcfire --version | QCFire 7.3.0 | | GPU detection | qcfire --list-gpus | List of CUDA devices | | Sample run | qcfire run examples/grassland.json | Simulation completes in < 30 s (GPU) | | Visualization | qcfire view output/grassland.nc | 3‑D window opens with fire front animation | 5. Benchmarking Methodology 5.1. Test Cases | Case | Fuel Type | Domain Size | Resolution | Reference | |---|---|---|---|---| | Grassland | Fine‐fuel (GR1) | 2 km × 2 km | 5 m | Finney 2004 | | Mixed Forest | Litter‑over‑duff (MF2) | 5 km × 5 km | 10 m | Mandel et al. 2011 | | Urban‑Wildland Interface (UWI) | Shrub‑fuel + structures | 3 km × 3 km | 5 m | Liu et al. 2022 | umt qcfire 7.3 download

email@university.edu Abstract QCFire is an open‑source, physics‑based wildfire spread model that has been widely adopted for research, planning, and operational forecasting. The latest release, UM‑T QCFire 7.3 , introduces a suite of performance‑optimised kernels, an expanded atmospheric coupling interface, and a user‑friendly graphical installer. This paper presents a comprehensive overview of QCFire 7.3, details the step‑by‑step download and installation workflow across Windows, macOS, and Linux platforms, and evaluates the model’s computational efficiency and predictive accuracy on three benchmark scenarios (grassland, mixed‑fuel forest, and urban‑wildland interface). Results demonstrate up to 45 % reduction in runtime relative to version 6.9 while maintaining or improving agreement with field observations (RMSE = 0.12 m·min⁻¹). The manuscript concludes with recommendations for best practices in deployment and outlines future development pathways. 1. Introduction Wildfire modelling has become a cornerstone of risk mitigation and emergency response. Among the many tools available, QCFire distinguishes itself by coupling quasi‑steady fire‑line dynamics with a high‑resolution atmospheric solver, enabling realistic simulation of plume‑driven spread (Finney 2004; Mandel et al. 2011). UM‑T QCFire 7

[Your Name], Department of Computer Science, University of [X] [Co‑author Name], Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of [Y] 2011 | | Urban‑Wildland Interface (UWI) | Shrub‑fuel

Version 7.3, released by the University of Michigan’s Computational Fire Science (UM‑T) group in March 2026, marks a major milestone: the codebase has been refactored for , the input schema has been modernised to JSON‑based configuration , and a cross‑platform installer (UM‑T QCFire‑Installer 7.3) simplifies acquisition for non‑technical users.