TY - JOUR
T1 - Physics-dynamics coupling in weather, climate, and Earth system models
T2 - Challenges and recent progress
AU - Gross, Markus
AU - Wan, Hui
AU - Rasch, Philip J.
AU - Caldwell, Peter M.
AU - Williamson, David L.
AU - Klocke, Daniel
AU - Jablonowski, Christiane
AU - Thatcher, Diana R.
AU - Wood, Nigel
AU - Cullen, Mike
AU - Beare, Bob
AU - Willett, Martin
AU - Lemarié, Florian
AU - Blayo, Eric
AU - Malardel, Sylvie
AU - Termonia, Piet
AU - Gassmann, Almut
AU - Lauritzen, Peter H.
AU - Johansen, Hans
AU - Zarzycki, Colin M.
AU - Sakaguchi, Koichi
AU - Leung, Ruby
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Numerical weather, climate, or Earth system models involve the coupling of components. At a broad level, these components can be classified as the resolved fluid dynamics, unresolved fluid dynamical aspects (i.e., those represented by physical parameterizations such as subgrid-scale mixing), and nonfluid dynamical aspects such as radiation and microphysical processes. Typically, each component is developed, at least initially, independently.Once development ismature, the components are coupled to deliver a model of the required complexity. The implementation of the coupling can have a significant impact on the model.As the error associated with each component decreases, the errors introduced by the coupling will eventually dominate. Hence, any improvement in one of the components is unlikely to improve the performance of the overall system. The challenges associated with combining the components to create a coherentmodel are here termed physics-dynamics coupling. The issue goes beyond the coupling between the parameterizations and the resolved fluid dynamics. This paper highlights recent progress and some of the current challenges. It focuses on three objectives: to illustrate the phenomenology of the coupling problemwith references to examples in the literature, to show howthe problem can be analyzed, and to create awareness of the issue across the disciplines and specializations. The topics addressed are different ways of advancing full models in time, approaches to understanding the role of the coupling and evaluation of approaches, coupling ocean and atmosphere models, thermodynamic compatibility between model components, and emerging issues such as those that arise as model resolutions increase and/ormodels use variable resolutions.
AB - Numerical weather, climate, or Earth system models involve the coupling of components. At a broad level, these components can be classified as the resolved fluid dynamics, unresolved fluid dynamical aspects (i.e., those represented by physical parameterizations such as subgrid-scale mixing), and nonfluid dynamical aspects such as radiation and microphysical processes. Typically, each component is developed, at least initially, independently.Once development ismature, the components are coupled to deliver a model of the required complexity. The implementation of the coupling can have a significant impact on the model.As the error associated with each component decreases, the errors introduced by the coupling will eventually dominate. Hence, any improvement in one of the components is unlikely to improve the performance of the overall system. The challenges associated with combining the components to create a coherentmodel are here termed physics-dynamics coupling. The issue goes beyond the coupling between the parameterizations and the resolved fluid dynamics. This paper highlights recent progress and some of the current challenges. It focuses on three objectives: to illustrate the phenomenology of the coupling problemwith references to examples in the literature, to show howthe problem can be analyzed, and to create awareness of the issue across the disciplines and specializations. The topics addressed are different ways of advancing full models in time, approaches to understanding the role of the coupling and evaluation of approaches, coupling ocean and atmosphere models, thermodynamic compatibility between model components, and emerging issues such as those that arise as model resolutions increase and/ormodels use variable resolutions.
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U2 - 10.1175/MWR-D-17-0345.1
DO - 10.1175/MWR-D-17-0345.1
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85062559967
SN - 0027-0644
VL - 146
SP - 3505
EP - 3544
JO - Monthly Weather Review
JF - Monthly Weather Review
IS - 11
ER -