875,924 research outputs found
Stratospheric General Circulation with Chemistry Model (SGCCM)
In the past two years constituent transport and chemistry experiments have been performed using both simple single constituent models and more complex reservoir species models. Winds for these experiments have been taken from the data assimilation effort, Stratospheric Data Analysis System (STRATAN)
Volcanic forcing improves Atmosphere-Ocean Coupled General Circulation Model scaling performance
Recent Atmosphere-Ocean Coupled General Circulation Model (AOGCM) simulations
of the twentieth century climate, which account for anthropogenic and natural
forcings, make it possible to study the origin of long-term temperature
correlations found in the observed records. We study ensemble experiments
performed with the NCAR PCM for 10 different historical scenarios, including no
forcings, greenhouse gas, sulfate aerosol, ozone, solar, volcanic forcing and
various combinations, such as it natural, anthropogenic and all forcings. We
compare the scaling exponents characterizing the long-term correlations of the
observed and simulated model data for 16 representative land stations and 16
sites in the Atlantic Ocean for these scenarios. We find that inclusion of
volcanic forcing in the AOGCM considerably improves the PCM scaling behavior.
The scenarios containing volcanic forcing are able to reproduce quite well the
observed scaling exponents for the land with exponents around 0.65 independent
of the station distance from the ocean. For the Atlantic Ocean, scenarios with
the volcanic forcing slightly underestimate the observed persistence exhibiting
an average exponent 0.74 instead of 0.85 for reconstructed data.Comment: 4 figure
Adaptation of a general circulation model to ocean dynamics
A primitive-variable general circulation model of the ocean was formulated in which fast external gravity waves are suppressed with rigid-lid surface constraint pressires which also provide a means for simulating the effects of large-scale free-surface topography. The surface pressure method is simpler to apply than the conventional stream function models, and the resulting model can be applied to both global ocean and limited region situations. Strengths and weaknesses of the model are also presented
Empirical and modeled synoptic cloud climatology of the Arctic Ocean
A daily climatology of the atmospheric circulation of the Arctic and the associated cloud conditions were determined. These are used for comparisons with the variability of general circulation model, generated circulation, and cloud cover for the same region
Optimisation of a parallel ocean general circulation model
Abstract. This paper presents the development of a general-purpose parallel ocean circulation model, for use on a wide range of computer platforms, from traditional scalar machines to workstation clusters and massively parallel processors. Parallelism is provided, as a modular option, via high-level message-passing rou- tines, thus hiding the technical intricacies from the user. An initial implementation highlights that the parallel e?ciency of the model is adversely a?ected by a number of factors, for which optimisations are discussed and implemented. The resulting ocean code is portable and, in particular, allows science to be achieved on local workstations that could otherwise only be undertaken on state-of-the-art supercomputers
THOR 2.0: Major Improvements to the Open-Source General Circulation Model
THOR is the first open-source general circulation model (GCM) developed from
scratch to study the atmospheres and climates of exoplanets, free from Earth-
or Solar System-centric tunings. It solves the general non-hydrostatic Euler
equations (instead of the primitive equations) on a sphere using the
icosahedral grid. In the current study, we report major upgrades to THOR,
building upon the work of Mendon\c{c}a et al. (2016). First, while the
Horizontally Explicit Vertically Implicit (HEVI) integration scheme is the same
as that described in Mendon\c{c}a et al. (2016), we provide a clearer
description of the scheme and improved its implementation in the code. The
differences in implementation between the hydrostatic shallow (HSS),
quasi-hydrostatic deep (QHD) and non-hydrostatic deep (NHD) treatments are
fully detailed. Second, standard physics modules are added: two-stream,
double-gray radiative transfer and dry convective adjustment. Third, THOR is
tested on additional benchmarks: tidally-locked Earth, deep hot Jupiter,
acoustic wave, and gravity wave. Fourth, we report that differences between the
hydrostatic and non-hydrostatic simulations are negligible in the Earth case,
but pronounced in the hot Jupiter case. Finally, the effects of the so-called
"sponge layer", a form of drag implemented in most GCMs to provide numerical
stability, are examined. Overall, these upgrades have improved the flexibility,
user-friendliness, and stability of THOR.Comment: 57 pages, 31 figures, revised, accepted for publication in ApJ
Passive tracers in a general circulation model of the Southern Ocean
Passive tracers are used in an o?-line version of the United Kingdom Fine Resolution Antarctic Model (FRAM) to highlight features of the circulation and provide information on the inter-ocean exchange of water masses. The use of passive tracers allows a picture to be built up of the deep circulation which is not readily apparent from examination of the velocity or density ®elds. Comparison of observations with FRAM results gives good agreement for many features of the Southern Ocean circulation. Tracer distributions are consistent with the concept of a global ``conveyor belt'' with a return path via the Agulhas retro¯ection region for the replenishment of North Atlantic Deep Water
Stratospheric dynamics and transport studies
A three dimensional General Circulation Model/Transport Model is used to simulate stratospheric circulation and constituent distributions. Model simulations are analyzed to interpret radiative, chemical, and dynamical processes and their mutual interactions. Concurrent complementary studies are conducted using both global satellite data and other appropriate data. Comparisons of model simulations and data analysis studies are used to aid in understanding stratospheric dynamics and transport processes and to assess the validity of current theory and models
North Atlantic oscillation response to anomalous Indian Ocean SST in a coupled GCM
The dominant pattern of atmospheric variability in the North Atlantic sector is the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Since the 1970s the NAO has been well characterized by a trend toward its positive phase. Recent atmospheric general circulation model studies have linked this trend to a progressive warming of the Indian Ocean. Unfortunately, a clear mechanism responsible for the change of the NAO could not be given. This study provides further details of the NAO response to Indian Ocean sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies. This is done by conducting experiments with a coupled ocean–atmosphere general circulation model (OAGCM). The authors develop a hypothesis of how the Indian Ocean impacts the NAO
A General Circulation Model for Gaseous Exoplanets with Double-Gray Radiative Transfer
We present a new version of our code for modeling the atmospheric circulation
on gaseous exoplanets, now employing a "double-gray" radiative transfer scheme,
which self-consistently solves for fluxes and heating throughout the
atmosphere, including the emerging (observable) infrared flux. We separate the
radiation into infrared and optical components, each with its own absorption
coefficient, and solve standard two-stream radiative transfer equations. We use
a constant optical absorption coefficient, while the infrared coefficient can
scale as a powerlaw with pressure. Here we describe our new code in detail and
demonstrate its utility by presenting a generic hot Jupiter model. We discuss
issues related to modeling the deepest pressures of the atmosphere and describe
our use of the diffusion approximation for radiative fluxes at high optical
depths. In addition, we present new models using a simple form for magnetic
drag on the atmosphere. We calculate emitted thermal phase curves and find that
our drag-free model has the brightest region of the atmosphere offset by ~12
degrees from the substellar point and a minimum flux that is 17% of the
maximum, while the model with the strongest magnetic drag has an offset of only
~2 degrees and a ratio of 13%. Finally, we calculate rates of numerical loss of
kinetic energy at ~15% for every model except for our strong-drag model, where
there is no measurable loss; we speculate that this is due to the much
decreased wind speeds in that model.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables, submitted to Ap
- …
