17 research outputs found
A confinedâunconfined aquifer model for subglacial hydrology and its application to the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream
Subglacial hydrology plays an important role in ice sheet dynamics as it determines
the sliding velocity. It also drives freshwater into the ocean, leading to undercutting of calving fronts by plumes.
Modeling subglacial water has been a challenge for decades. Only
recently have new approaches been developed such as representing subglacial channels
and thin water sheets by separate layers of variable hydraulic conductivity.
We extend this concept by modeling a confinedâunconfined
aquifer system (CUAS) in a single layer of an equivalent porous medium (EPM). The advantage of this formulation is
that it prevents unphysical values of pressure at reasonable computational
cost. We performed sensitivity tests to investigate the effect of
different model parameters. The strongest influence of model parameters was
detected in terms of governing the opening and closure of the system. Furthermore,
we applied the model to the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream, where
an efficient system independent of seasonal input was identified about
500 km downstream from the ice divide.
Using the effective pressure from the hydrology model, the Ice
Sheet System Model (ISSM) showed considerable improvements in
modeled velocities in the coastal region.</p
Groundwater data improve modelling of headwater stream CO<sub>2</sub> outgassing with a stable DIC isotope approach
A large portion of terrestrially derived carbon outgasses as carbon dioxide
(CO2) from streams and rivers to the atmosphere. Particularly, the
amount of CO2 outgassing from small headwater streams
is highly uncertain. Conservative estimates suggest that they contribute
36âŻ% (i.e. 0.93 petagrams (Pg) CâŻyrâ1) of total CO2 outgassing
from all fluvial ecosystems on the globe. In this study, stream pCO2,
dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), and ÎŽ13CDIC data
were used to determine CO2 outgassing from an acidic headwater stream in
the UhlĂĆskĂĄ catchment (Czech Republic). This stream drains a
catchment with silicate bedrock. The applied stable isotope model is based on
the principle that the 13CâŻââŻ12C ratio of its sources and the
intensity of CO2 outgassing control the isotope ratio of DIC in stream
water. It avoids the use of the gas transfer velocity parameter (k), which
is highly variable and mostly difficult to constrain. Model results indicate
that CO2 outgassing contributed more than 80âŻ% to the annual stream
inorganic carbon loss in the UhlĂĆskĂĄ catchment. This translated
to a CO2 outgassing rate from the stream of 34.9âŻkg
CâŻmâ2âŻyrâ1 when normalised to the stream surface area. Large
temporal variations with maximum values shortly before spring snowmelt and in
summer emphasise the need for investigations at higher temporal resolution.
We improved the model uncertainty by incorporating groundwater data to better
constrain the isotope compositions of initial DIC. Due to the large global
abundance of acidic, humic-rich headwaters, we underline the importance of
this integral approach for global applications
Scalability and some optimization of the Finite-volumE Sea iceâOcean Model, Version 2.0 (FESOM2)
A study of the scalability of the Finite-volumE Sea iceâOcean circulation Model, Version 2.0 (FESOM2), the first mature global model of its kind formulated on unstructured meshes, is presented. This study includes an analysis of the main computational kernels with a special focus on bottlenecks in parallel scalability. Several model enhancements improving this scalability for large numbers of processes are described and tested. Model grids at different resolutions are used on four high-performance computing (HPC) systems with differing computational and communication hardware to demonstrate the model's scalability and throughput. Furthermore, strategies for improvements in parallel performance are presented and assessed. We show that, in terms of throughput, FESOM2 is on a par with state-of-the-art structured ocean models and, in a realistic eddy-resolving configuration (1/10â resolution), can achieve about 16 years per day on 14â000 cores. This suggests that unstructured-mesh models are becoming very competitive tools in high-resolution climate modeling. We show that the main bottlenecks of FESOM2 parallel scalability are the two-dimensional components of the model, namely the computations of the external (barotropic) mode and the sea-ice model. It is argued that these bottlenecks are shared with other general ocean circulation models
Multiscale modeling of coastal, shelf, and global ocean dynamics
In contemporary ocean science, modeling systems that integrate understanding of complex multiscale phenomena and utilize efficient numerics are paramount. Many of today's fundamental ocean science questions involve multiple scales and multiple dynamics. A new generation of modeling systems would allow to study such questions quantitatively by being less restrictive dynamically and more efficient numerically than more traditional systems