8 research outputs found

    Why the Euler scheme in particle tracking is not enough: The shallow-sea pycnocline test case

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    During the last decades, the Euler scheme was the common “workhorse” in particle tracking, although it is the lowest-order approximation of the underlying stochastic differential equation. To convince the modelling community of the need for better methods, we have constructed a new test case that will show the shortcomings of the Euler scheme. We use an idealised shallow-water diffusivity profile that mimics the presence of a sharp pycnocline and thus a quasi-impermeable barrier to vertical diffusion. In this context, we study the transport of passive particles with or without negative buoyancy. A semi-analytic solutions is used to assess the performance of various numerical particle-tracking schemes (first- and secondorder accuracy), to treat the variations in the diffusivity profile properly. We show that the commonly used Euler scheme exhibits a poor performance and that widely used particle-tracking codes shall be updated to either the Milstein scheme or second-order schemes. It is further seen that the order of convergence is not the only relevant factor, the absolute value of the error also is.Delft Institute of Applied MathematicsElectrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Scienc

    The Impacts of Anthropogenic and Climatic Factors on the Interaction of Spercheios River and Maliakos Gulf, the Aegean Sea

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