Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the...

15
Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations

Transcript of Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the...

Page 1: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations

Page 2: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Vertical coordinates for climate?• What are the remaining liabilities or challenges

with z, z*, p, p*, isopycnal, and various approaches to hybrids between coordinates?

• Will sigma ever be viable for long-term global ocean climate modeling?

• Are there "coordinate free" approaches that seem viable, and if so how is the vertical resolution distributed?

• Do ice-shelves or changing coastlines introduce significant new considerations?

Page 3: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Strengths and Weaknesses of Terrain-following Coordinate ModelsStrengths:• Topography is represented very simply and accurately• Easy to enhance resolution near surface.• Lots of experience with atmospheric modeling to draw upon.

Traditional Weaknesses:• Pressure gradient errors are a persistent problem.

Errors are reduced with better numerics (e.g., Shchepetkin & McWilliams, 2003)• Gentle slopes (smoothed topography) must be used for consistency

Traditional requirement for stability (Beckman & Haidvogel, 1993):

ROMS requirement (Shchepetkin, pers. comm):

• Spurious diapycnal mixing due to advection may be very large. (Same issue as Z-coord.)

• Diffusion tensors may be especially difficult to rotate into the neutral direction. Strongly slopes require larger vertical stencil for the isoneutral-diffusion operator.

Myth: Near bottom resolution can be arbitrarily enhanced. Hydrostatic consistency imposes horizontal resolution-dependent constraints on

near-bottom vertical resolution, with serious implications for the ability to represent overflows

2.02

DD

DD

D

D

SSZ pp 11

83~ toz

x

dx

dz

s

Page 4: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,
Page 5: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Dzx /5Maximum Hydrostatically Consistent Horizontal Resolution

Horizontal Resolution (in km) Required to Permit 50m Vertical Resolution at Bottom

Page 6: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Dzx /5Maximum Hydrostatically Consistent Horizontal Resolution

Horizontal Resolution (in km) Required to Permit 50m Vertical Resolution at Bottom

Page 7: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Dzx /5Maximum Hydrostatically Consistent Horizontal Resolution

Horizontal Resolution (in km) Required to Permit 50m Vertical Resolution at Bottom

Page 8: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,
Page 9: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Common ApproximationsApproximation How large are errors? Consequences

Boussinesq (-0)/0~0.01 Volume conserved, not mass

Virtual salt flux (35psu-S) / S – very large? Big errors where fresh!

Rigid Lid ~1m / DOce Infinite external wave speed

Thin shell DOce / REarth ~ 0.001

Spherical Earth 10km/6370km ~ 0.0015

Constant gravitational acceleration (g)

2DOce / REarth ~ 0.0015.0025/9.8 ~ 0.00025

Hydrostatic As2*Ro, As*Ro Filter sound waves; No explicit convection

Traditional As*Ro Goes with hydrostatic

Potential temperature as Conservative temperature

(Ask Trevor McDougall)Differ by ~2 C at 0 PSU

Heat capacity varies, but agrees with old conventions

PSU as absolute salinity (35.16505/35-1) ~ 0.0047

Flow-invariant geoid 10% at amphidromic scales

Page 10: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Unstructured ocean grids?• Will any be IPCC-ready by AR6?

• What are the big issues?– Cost?– Conservation?– Adiabaticity?– Experience?

Page 11: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Pressure gradient errors?• Are there still outstanding issues with pressure

gradient force calculations with generalized (i.e. non-P, non-Z, non-in-situ-density) coordinates?

• How serious is this issue?

Page 12: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Numerics for Momentum Eqns• Numerical closures for the momentum

equations:– Is there anything new?– Is anything new needed?

Page 13: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Tracer advection• What is the state of the art?

• What is good enough at which resolutions and for which vertical coordinates?

• How serious is the problem in climate models with spurious diapycnal mixing arising from tracer advection at various resolutions?

Page 14: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Scaling to 1000s of PEs• Scaling to 20 pts/PE

– At 1° scales to (360/20)x(200/20) ~ 180 PEs– At 1/4° Mercator scales to ~ 3,600 PEs?– At 0.1 ° Mercator scales to ~ 25,000 Pes

• Scaling to 10 pts/PE– At 1° scales to (360/10)x(200/10) ~ 720 PEs– At 1/4° Mercator scales to ~ 14,400 PEs?– At 0.1 ° Mercator scales to ~ 100,000 Pes?

Page 15: Model Formulation, Numerics and Approximations. Vertical coordinates for climate? What are the remaining liabilities or challenges with z, z*, p, p*,

Plug & Play Software?• Is this desirable?

• What are we willing to give up for this?

• Who will pay for it?