Title: The equations of motion and their numerical solutions II
1The equations of motion and their numerical
solutions II
by Nils Wedi (2006) contributions by Mike Cullen
and Piotr Smolarkiewicz
2Dry dynamical core equations
- Shallow water equations
- Isopycnic/isentropic equations
- Compressible Euler equations
- Incompressible Euler equations
- Boussinesq-type approximations
- Anelastic equations
- Primitive equations
- Pressure or mass coordinate equations
3Shallow water equations
Numerical implementation by transformation to a
Generalized transport form for the momentum flux
This form can be solved by eg. MPDATA Smolarkiewic
z and Margolin (1998)
4Isopycnic/isentropic equations
- eg. Bleck (1974) Hsu and Arakawa (1990)
isentropic
isopycnic
shallow water
defines depth between shallow water layers
5More general isentropic-sigma equations
Konor and Arakawa (1997)
6Euler equations for isentropic inviscid motion
7Euler equations for isentropic inviscid motion
Speed of sound (in dry air 15ºC dry air 340m/s)
8Reference and environmental profiles
- Distinguish between
- (only vertically varying) static reference or
basic state profile (used to facilitate
comprehension of the full equations) - Environmental or balanced state profile (used
in general procedures to stabilize or increase
the accuracy of numerical integrations satisfies
all or a subset of the full equations, more
recently attempts to have a locally reconstructed
hydrostatic balanced state or use a previous time
step as the balanced state
9The use of reference and environmental/balanced
profiles
- For reasons of numerical accuracy and/or
stability an environmental/balanced state is
often subtracted from the governing equations
Clark and Farley (1984)
?
10NOT approximated Euler perturbation equations
using
11Incompressible Euler equations
- eg. Durran (1999) Casulli and Cheng (1992)
Casulli (1998)
12Example of simulation with sharp density gradient
Animation
"two-layer" simulation of a critical flow past
a gentle mountain
Compare to shallow water
reduced domain simulation with H prescribed by
an explicit shallow water model
13Two-layer t0.15
14Shallow water t0.15
15Two-layer t0.5
16Shallow water t0.5
17Classical Boussinesq approximation
18Projection method
Subject to boundary conditions !!!
19Integrability condition
With boundary condition
20Solution
Ap f
Since there is a discretization in space !!!
Most commonly used techniques for the iterative
solution of sparse linear-algebraic systems that
arise in fluid dynamics are the preconditioned
conjugate gradient method and the multigrid
method. Durran (1999)
21Importance of the Boussinesq linearization in the
momentum equation
Two layer flow animation with density ratio
11000 Equivalent to air-water
Incompressible Euler two-layer fluid flow past
obstacle
Incompressible Boussinesq two-layer fluid flow
past obstacle
Two layer flow animation with density ratio
297300 Equivalent to moist air 17g/kg - dry
air
Incompressible Euler two-layer fluid flow past
obstacle
Incompressible Boussinesq two-layer fluid flow
past obstacle
22Anelastic approximation
- Batchelor (1953) Ogura and Philipps (1962)
Wilhelmson and Ogura (1972) Lipps and Hemler
(1982) Bacmeister and Schoeberl (1989) Durran
(1989) Bannon (1996)
23Anelastic approximation
Lipps and Hemler (1982)
24Numerical Approximation
Compact conservation-law form
Lagrangian Form
?
25Numerical Approximation
with
LE, flux-form Eulerian or Semi-Lagrangian
formulation using MPDATA advection schemes
Smolarkiewicz and Margolin (JCP, 1998)
?
with
Prusa and Smolarkiewicz (JCP, 2003)
specified and/or periodic boundaries
26Importance of implementation detail?
Example of translating oscillator (Smolarkiewicz,
2005)
time
27Example
Naive centered-in-space-and-time discretization
Non-oscillatory forward in time (NFT)
discretization
paraphrase of so called Strang splitting,
Smolarkiewicz and Margolin (1993)
28Compressible Euler equations
29Compressible Euler equations
30A semi-Lagrangian semi-implicit solution procedure
(not as implemented, Davies et al. (2005) for
details)
Davies et al. (1998,2005)
31A semi-Lagrangian semi-implicit solution procedure
32A semi-Lagrangian semi-implicit solution procedure
Non-constant- coefficient approach!
33Pressure based formulationsHydrostatic
Hydrostatic equations in pressure coordinates
34Pressure based formulationsHistorical NH
Miller (1974) Miller and White (1984)
35Pressure based formulationsHirlam NH
Rõõm et. Al (2001), and references therein
36Pressure based formulationsMass-coordinate
Laprise (1992)
Define mass-based coordinate coordinate
hydrostatic pressure in a vertically
unbounded shallow atmosphere
By definition monotonic with respect to
geometrical height
Relates to Rõõm et. Al (2001)
37Pressure based formulations
Laprise (1992)
Momentum equation
Thermodynamic equation
Continuity equation
with
38Pressure based formulationsECMWF/Arpege/Aladin
NH model
Bubnova et al. (1995) Benard et al. (2004),
Benard (2004)
hybrid vertical coordinate
Simmons and Burridge (1981)
coordinate transformation coefficient
scaled pressure departure
vertical divergence
with
39Pressure based formulations ECMWF/Arpege/Aladin
NH model
40Hydrostatic vs. Non-hydrostatic
- eg. Keller (1994)
- Estimation of the validity
41Hydrostaticity
42Hydrostaticity
43Hydrostatic vs. Non-hydrostatic
Non-hydrostatic flow past a mountain without wind
shear
Hydrostatic flow past a mountain without wind
shear
44Hydrostatic vs. Non-hydrostatic
Non-hydrostatic flow past a mountain with
vertical wind shear
Hydrostatic flow past a mountain with vertical
wind shear
But still fairly high resolution L 30-100 km
45Hydrostatic vs. Non-hydrostatic
hill
hill
Idealized T159L91 IFS simulation with parameters
g,T,U,L chosen to have marginally hydrostatic
conditions NL/U 5
46Compressible vs. anelastic
Lipps Hemler approximation
Hydrostatic
47Compressible vs. anelastic
48Normal mode analysis of the switch equations
Davies et. Al. (2003)
- Normal mode analysis done on linearized equations
noting distortion of Rossby modes if equations
are (sound-)filtered - Differences found with respect to gravity modes
between different equation sets. However,
conclusions on gravity modes are subject to
simplifications made on boundaries,
shear/non-shear effects, assumed reference state,
increased importance of the neglected non-linear
effects