| 1 | adcroft | 1.2 | % $Header: /u/gcmpack/mitgcmdoc/part1/manual.src,v 1.1 2001/10/11 19:36:56 adcroft Exp $ | 
| 2 | adcroft | 1.1 | % $Name:  $ | 
| 3 |  |  |  | 
| 4 |  |  | %tci%\documentclass[12pt]{book} | 
| 5 |  |  | %tci%\usepackage{amsmath} | 
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| 29 |  |  |  | 
| 30 |  |  | %tci%\begin{document} | 
| 31 |  |  |  | 
| 32 |  |  | %tci%\tableofcontents | 
| 33 |  |  |  | 
| 34 |  |  |  | 
| 35 |  |  | % Section: Overview | 
| 36 |  |  |  | 
| 37 | adcroft | 1.2 | % $Header: /u/gcmpack/mitgcmdoc/part1/manual.src,v 1.1 2001/10/11 19:36:56 adcroft Exp $ | 
| 38 | adcroft | 1.1 | % $Name:  $ | 
| 39 |  |  |  | 
| 40 |  |  | \section{Introduction} | 
| 41 |  |  |  | 
| 42 |  |  | This documentation provides the reader with the information necessary to | 
| 43 |  |  | carry out numerical experiments using MITgcm. It gives a comprehensive | 
| 44 |  |  | description of the continuous equations on which the model is based, the | 
| 45 |  |  | numerical algorithms the model employs and a description of the associated | 
| 46 |  |  | program code. Along with the hydrodynamical kernel, physical and | 
| 47 |  |  | biogeochemical parameterizations of key atmospheric and oceanic processes | 
| 48 |  |  | are available. A number of examples illustrating the use of the model in | 
| 49 |  |  | both process and general circulation studies of the atmosphere and ocean are | 
| 50 |  |  | also presented. | 
| 51 |  |  |  | 
| 52 |  |  | MITgcm has a number of novel aspects: | 
| 53 |  |  |  | 
| 54 |  |  | \begin{itemize} | 
| 55 |  |  | \item it can be used to study both atmospheric and oceanic phenomena; one | 
| 56 |  |  | hydrodynamical kernel is used to drive forward both atmospheric and oceanic | 
| 57 |  |  | models - see fig | 
| 58 |  |  | \marginpar{ | 
| 59 |  |  | Fig.1 One model}\ref{fig:onemodel} | 
| 60 |  |  |  | 
| 61 |  |  | %% CNHbegin | 
| 62 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/one_model_figure} | 
| 63 |  |  | %% CNHend | 
| 64 |  |  |  | 
| 65 |  |  | \item it has a non-hydrostatic capability and so can be used to study both | 
| 66 |  |  | small-scale and large scale processes - see fig | 
| 67 |  |  | \marginpar{ | 
| 68 |  |  | Fig.2 All scales}\ref{fig:all-scales} | 
| 69 |  |  |  | 
| 70 |  |  | %% CNHbegin | 
| 71 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/all_scales_figure} | 
| 72 |  |  | %% CNHend | 
| 73 |  |  |  | 
| 74 |  |  | \item finite volume techniques are employed yielding an intuitive | 
| 75 |  |  | discretization and support for the treatment of irregular geometries using | 
| 76 |  |  | orthogonal curvilinear grids and shaved cells - see fig | 
| 77 |  |  | \marginpar{ | 
| 78 |  |  | Fig.3 Finite volumes}\ref{fig:finite-volumes} | 
| 79 |  |  |  | 
| 80 |  |  | %% CNHbegin | 
| 81 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/fvol_figure} | 
| 82 |  |  | %% CNHend | 
| 83 |  |  |  | 
| 84 |  |  | \item tangent linear and adjoint counterparts are automatically maintained | 
| 85 |  |  | along with the forward model, permitting sensitivity and optimization | 
| 86 |  |  | studies. | 
| 87 |  |  |  | 
| 88 |  |  | \item the model is developed to perform efficiently on a wide variety of | 
| 89 |  |  | computational platforms. | 
| 90 |  |  | \end{itemize} | 
| 91 |  |  |  | 
| 92 |  |  | Key publications reporting on and charting the development of the model are | 
| 93 |  |  | listed in an Appendix. | 
| 94 |  |  |  | 
| 95 |  |  | We begin by briefly showing some of the results of the model in action to | 
| 96 |  |  | give a feel for the wide range of problems that can be addressed using it. | 
| 97 |  |  |  | 
| 98 | adcroft | 1.2 | % $Header: /u/gcmpack/mitgcmdoc/part1/manual.src,v 1.1 2001/10/11 19:36:56 adcroft Exp $ | 
| 99 | adcroft | 1.1 | % $Name:  $ | 
| 100 |  |  |  | 
| 101 |  |  | \section{Illustrations of the model in action} | 
| 102 |  |  |  | 
| 103 |  |  | The MITgcm has been designed and used to model a wide range of phenomena, | 
| 104 |  |  | from convection on the scale of meters in the ocean to the global pattern of | 
| 105 |  |  | atmospheric winds - see fig.2\ref{fig:all-scales}. To give a flavor of the | 
| 106 |  |  | kinds of problems the model has been used to study, we briefly describe some | 
| 107 |  |  | of them here. A more detailed description of the underlying formulation, | 
| 108 |  |  | numerical algorithm and implementation that lie behind these calculations is | 
| 109 |  |  | given later. Indeed many of the illustrative examples shown below can be | 
| 110 |  |  | easily reproduced: simply download the model (the minimum you need is a PC | 
| 111 |  |  | running linux, together with a FORTRAN\ 77 compiler) and follow the examples | 
| 112 |  |  | described in detail in the documentation. | 
| 113 |  |  |  | 
| 114 |  |  | \subsection{Global atmosphere: `Held-Suarez' benchmark} | 
| 115 |  |  |  | 
| 116 |  |  | A novel feature of MITgcm is its ability to simulate both atmospheric and | 
| 117 |  |  | oceanographic flows at both small and large scales. | 
| 118 |  |  |  | 
| 119 |  |  | Fig.E1a.\ref{fig:eddy_cs} shows an instantaneous plot of the 500$mb$ | 
| 120 |  |  | temperature field obtained using the atmospheric isomorph of MITgcm run at | 
| 121 |  |  | 2.8$^{\circ }$ resolution on the cubed sphere. We see cold air over the pole | 
| 122 |  |  | (blue) and warm air along an equatorial band (red). Fully developed | 
| 123 |  |  | baroclinic eddies spawned in the northern hemisphere storm track are | 
| 124 |  |  | evident. There are no mountains or land-sea contrast in this calculation, | 
| 125 |  |  | but you can easily put them in. The model is driven by relaxation to a | 
| 126 |  |  | radiative-convective equilibrium profile, following the description set out | 
| 127 |  |  | in Held and Suarez; 1994 designed to test atmospheric hydrodynamical cores - | 
| 128 |  |  | there are no mountains or land-sea contrast. | 
| 129 |  |  |  | 
| 130 |  |  | %% CNHbegin | 
| 131 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/cubic_eddies_figure} | 
| 132 |  |  | %% CNHend | 
| 133 |  |  |  | 
| 134 |  |  | As described in Adcroft (2001), a `cubed sphere' is used to discretize the | 
| 135 |  |  | globe permitting a uniform gridding and obviated the need to fourier filter. | 
| 136 |  |  | The `vector-invariant' form of MITgcm supports any orthogonal curvilinear | 
| 137 |  |  | grid, of which the cubed sphere is just one of many choices. | 
| 138 |  |  |  | 
| 139 |  |  | Fig.E1b shows the 5-year mean, zonally averaged potential temperature, zonal | 
| 140 |  |  | wind and meridional overturning streamfunction from a 20-level version of | 
| 141 |  |  | the model. It compares favorable with more conventional spatial | 
| 142 |  |  | discretization approaches. | 
| 143 |  |  |  | 
| 144 |  |  | A regular spherical lat-lon grid can also be used. | 
| 145 |  |  |  | 
| 146 |  |  | %% CNHbegin | 
| 147 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/hs_zave_u_figure} | 
| 148 |  |  | %% CNHend | 
| 149 |  |  |  | 
| 150 |  |  | \subsection{Ocean gyres} | 
| 151 |  |  |  | 
| 152 |  |  | Baroclinic instability is a ubiquitous process in the ocean, as well as the | 
| 153 |  |  | atmosphere. Ocean eddies play an important role in modifying the | 
| 154 |  |  | hydrographic structure and current systems of the oceans. Coarse resolution | 
| 155 |  |  | models of the oceans cannot resolve the eddy field and yield rather broad, | 
| 156 |  |  | diffusive patterns of ocean currents. But if the resolution of our models is | 
| 157 |  |  | increased until the baroclinic instability process is resolved, numerical | 
| 158 |  |  | solutions of a different and much more realistic kind, can be obtained. | 
| 159 |  |  |  | 
| 160 |  |  | Fig. ?.? shows the surface temperature and velocity field obtained from | 
| 161 |  |  | MITgcm run at $\frac{1}{6}^{\circ }$ horizontal resolution on a $lat-lon$ | 
| 162 |  |  | grid in which the pole has been rotated by 90$^{\circ }$ on to the equator | 
| 163 |  |  | (to avoid the converging of meridian in northern latitudes). 21 vertical | 
| 164 |  |  | levels are used in the vertical with a `lopped cell' representation of | 
| 165 |  |  | topography. The development and propagation of anomalously warm and cold | 
| 166 |  |  | eddies can be clearly been seen in the Gulf Stream region. The transport of | 
| 167 |  |  | warm water northward by the mean flow of the Gulf Stream is also clearly | 
| 168 |  |  | visible. | 
| 169 |  |  |  | 
| 170 |  |  | %% CNHbegin | 
| 171 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/ocean_gyres_figure} | 
| 172 |  |  | %% CNHend | 
| 173 |  |  |  | 
| 174 |  |  |  | 
| 175 |  |  | \subsection{Global ocean circulation} | 
| 176 |  |  |  | 
| 177 |  |  | Fig.E2a shows the pattern of ocean currents at the surface of a 4$^{\circ }$ | 
| 178 |  |  | global ocean model run with 15 vertical levels. Lopped cells are used to | 
| 179 |  |  | represent topography on a regular $lat-lon$ grid extending from 70$^{\circ | 
| 180 |  |  | }N $ to 70$^{\circ }S$. The model is driven using monthly-mean winds with | 
| 181 |  |  | mixed boundary conditions on temperature and salinity at the surface. The | 
| 182 |  |  | transfer properties of ocean eddies, convection and mixing is parameterized | 
| 183 |  |  | in this model. | 
| 184 |  |  |  | 
| 185 |  |  | Fig.E2b shows the meridional overturning circulation of the global ocean in | 
| 186 |  |  | Sverdrups. | 
| 187 |  |  |  | 
| 188 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 189 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/global_circ_figure} | 
| 190 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 191 |  |  |  | 
| 192 |  |  | \subsection{Convection and mixing over topography} | 
| 193 |  |  |  | 
| 194 |  |  | Dense plumes generated by localized cooling on the continental shelf of the | 
| 195 |  |  | ocean may be influenced by rotation when the deformation radius is smaller | 
| 196 |  |  | than the width of the cooling region. Rather than gravity plumes, the | 
| 197 |  |  | mechanism for moving dense fluid down the shelf is then through geostrophic | 
| 198 |  |  | eddies. The simulation shown in the figure (blue is cold dense fluid, red is | 
| 199 |  |  | warmer, lighter fluid) employs the non-hydrostatic capability of MITgcm to | 
| 200 |  |  | trigger convection by surface cooling. The cold, dense water falls down the | 
| 201 |  |  | slope but is deflected along the slope by rotation. It is found that | 
| 202 |  |  | entrainment in the vertical plane is reduced when rotational control is | 
| 203 |  |  | strong, and replaced by lateral entrainment due to the baroclinic | 
| 204 |  |  | instability of the along-slope current. | 
| 205 |  |  |  | 
| 206 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 207 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/convect_and_topo} | 
| 208 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 209 |  |  |  | 
| 210 |  |  | \subsection{Boundary forced internal waves} | 
| 211 |  |  |  | 
| 212 |  |  | The unique ability of MITgcm to treat non-hydrostatic dynamics in the | 
| 213 |  |  | presence of complex geometry makes it an ideal tool to study internal wave | 
| 214 |  |  | dynamics and mixing in oceanic canyons and ridges driven by large amplitude | 
| 215 |  |  | barotropic tidal currents imposed through open boundary conditions. | 
| 216 |  |  |  | 
| 217 |  |  | Fig. ?.? shows the influence of cross-slope topographic variations on | 
| 218 |  |  | internal wave breaking - the cross-slope velocity is in color, the density | 
| 219 |  |  | contoured. The internal waves are excited by application of open boundary | 
| 220 |  |  | conditions on the left.\ They propagate to the sloping boundary (represented | 
| 221 |  |  | using MITgcm's finite volume spatial discretization) where they break under | 
| 222 |  |  | nonhydrostatic dynamics. | 
| 223 |  |  |  | 
| 224 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 225 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/boundary_forced_waves} | 
| 226 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 227 |  |  |  | 
| 228 |  |  | \subsection{Parameter sensitivity using the adjoint of MITgcm} | 
| 229 |  |  |  | 
| 230 |  |  | Forward and tangent linear counterparts of MITgcm are supported using an | 
| 231 |  |  | `automatic adjoint compiler'. These can be used in parameter sensitivity and | 
| 232 |  |  | data assimilation studies. | 
| 233 |  |  |  | 
| 234 |  |  | As one example of application of the MITgcm adjoint, Fig.E4 maps the | 
| 235 |  |  | gradient $\frac{\partial J}{\partial \mathcal{H}}$where $J$ is the magnitude | 
| 236 |  |  | of the overturning streamfunction shown in fig?.? at 40$^{\circ }$N and $ | 
| 237 |  |  | \mathcal{H}$ is the air-sea heat flux 100 years before. We see that $J$ is | 
| 238 |  |  | sensitive to heat fluxes over the Labrador Sea, one of the important sources | 
| 239 |  |  | of deep water for the thermohaline circulations. This calculation also | 
| 240 |  |  | yields sensitivities to all other model parameters. | 
| 241 |  |  |  | 
| 242 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 243 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/adj_hf_ocean_figure} | 
| 244 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 245 |  |  |  | 
| 246 |  |  | \subsection{Global state estimation of the ocean} | 
| 247 |  |  |  | 
| 248 |  |  | An important application of MITgcm is in state estimation of the global | 
| 249 |  |  | ocean circulation. An appropriately defined `cost function', which measures | 
| 250 |  |  | the departure of the model from observations (both remotely sensed and | 
| 251 |  |  | insitu) over an interval of time, is minimized by adjusting `control | 
| 252 |  |  | parameters' such as air-sea fluxes, the wind field, the initial conditions | 
| 253 |  |  | etc. Figure ?.? shows an estimate of the time-mean surface elevation of the | 
| 254 |  |  | ocean obtained by bringing the model in to consistency with altimetric and | 
| 255 |  |  | in-situ observations over the period 1992-1997. | 
| 256 |  |  |  | 
| 257 |  |  | %% CNHbegin | 
| 258 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/globes_figure} | 
| 259 |  |  | %% CNHend | 
| 260 |  |  |  | 
| 261 |  |  | \subsection{Ocean biogeochemical cycles} | 
| 262 |  |  |  | 
| 263 |  |  | MITgcm is being used to study global biogeochemical cycles in the ocean. For | 
| 264 |  |  | example one can study the effects of interannual changes in meteorological | 
| 265 |  |  | forcing and upper ocean circulation on the fluxes of carbon dioxide and | 
| 266 |  |  | oxygen between the ocean and atmosphere. The figure shows the annual air-sea | 
| 267 |  |  | flux of oxygen and its relation to density outcrops in the southern oceans | 
| 268 |  |  | from a single year of a global, interannually varying simulation. | 
| 269 |  |  |  | 
| 270 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 271 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/biogeo_figure} | 
| 272 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 273 |  |  |  | 
| 274 |  |  | \subsection{Simulations of laboratory experiments} | 
| 275 |  |  |  | 
| 276 |  |  | Figure ?.? shows MITgcm being used to simulate a laboratory experiment | 
| 277 |  |  | enquiring in to the dynamics of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC). An | 
| 278 |  |  | initially homogeneous tank of water ($1m$ in diameter) is driven from its | 
| 279 |  |  | free surface by a rotating heated disk. The combined action of mechanical | 
| 280 |  |  | and thermal forcing creates a lens of fluid which becomes baroclinically | 
| 281 |  |  | unstable. The stratification and depth of penetration of the lens is | 
| 282 |  |  | arrested by its instability in a process analogous to that whic sets the | 
| 283 |  |  | stratification of the ACC. | 
| 284 |  |  |  | 
| 285 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 286 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/lab_figure} | 
| 287 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 288 |  |  |  | 
| 289 | adcroft | 1.2 | % $Header: /u/gcmpack/mitgcmdoc/part1/manual.src,v 1.1 2001/10/11 19:36:56 adcroft Exp $ | 
| 290 | adcroft | 1.1 | % $Name:  $ | 
| 291 |  |  |  | 
| 292 |  |  | \section{Continuous equations in `r' coordinates} | 
| 293 |  |  |  | 
| 294 |  |  | To render atmosphere and ocean models from one dynamical core we exploit | 
| 295 |  |  | `isomorphisms' between equation sets that govern the evolution of the | 
| 296 |  |  | respective fluids - see fig.4 | 
| 297 |  |  | \marginpar{ | 
| 298 |  |  | Fig.4. Isomorphisms}. One system of hydrodynamical equations is written down | 
| 299 |  |  | and encoded. The model variables have different interpretations depending on | 
| 300 |  |  | whether the atmosphere or ocean is being studied. Thus, for example, the | 
| 301 |  |  | vertical coordinate `$r$' is interpreted as pressure, $p$, if we are | 
| 302 |  |  | modeling the atmosphere and height, $z$, if we are modeling the ocean. | 
| 303 |  |  |  | 
| 304 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 305 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/zandpcoord_figure.tex} | 
| 306 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 307 |  |  |  | 
| 308 |  |  | The state of the fluid at any time is characterized by the distribution of | 
| 309 |  |  | velocity $\vec{\mathbf{v}}$, active tracers $\theta $ and $S$, a | 
| 310 |  |  | `geopotential' $\phi $ and density $\rho =\rho (\theta ,S,p)$ which may | 
| 311 |  |  | depend on $\theta $, $S$, and $p$. The equations that govern the evolution | 
| 312 |  |  | of these fields, obtained by applying the laws of classical mechanics and | 
| 313 |  |  | thermodynamics to a Boussinesq, Navier-Stokes fluid are, written in terms of | 
| 314 |  |  | a generic vertical coordinate, $r$, see fig.5 | 
| 315 |  |  | \marginpar{ | 
| 316 |  |  | Fig.5 The vertical coordinate of model}: | 
| 317 |  |  |  | 
| 318 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 319 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/vertcoord_figure.tex} | 
| 320 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 321 |  |  |  | 
| 322 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 323 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}_{h}}}{Dt}+\left( 2\vec{\Omega}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 324 |  |  | \right) _{h}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\phi =\mathcal{F}_{\vec{\mathbf{v}_{h}}} | 
| 325 |  |  | \text{ horizontal mtm} | 
| 326 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 327 |  |  |  | 
| 328 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 329 |  |  | \frac{D\dot{r}}{Dt}+\widehat{k}\cdot \left( 2\vec{\Omega}\times \vec{\mathbf{ | 
| 330 |  |  | v}}\right) +\frac{\partial \phi }{\partial r}+b=\mathcal{F}_{\dot{r}}\text{ | 
| 331 |  |  | vertical mtm} | 
| 332 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 333 |  |  |  | 
| 334 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 335 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{\partial \dot{r}}{ | 
| 336 |  |  | \partial r}=0\text{ continuity}  \label{eq:continuous} | 
| 337 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 338 |  |  |  | 
| 339 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 340 |  |  | b=b(\theta ,S,r)\text{ equation of state} | 
| 341 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 342 |  |  |  | 
| 343 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 344 |  |  | \frac{D\theta }{Dt}=\mathcal{Q}_{\theta }\text{ potential temperature} | 
| 345 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 346 |  |  |  | 
| 347 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 348 |  |  | \frac{DS}{Dt}=\mathcal{Q}_{S}\text{ humidity/salinity} | 
| 349 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 350 |  |  |  | 
| 351 |  |  | Here: | 
| 352 |  |  |  | 
| 353 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 354 |  |  | r\text{ is the vertical coordinate} | 
| 355 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 356 |  |  |  | 
| 357 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 358 |  |  | \frac{D}{Dt}=\frac{\partial }{\partial t}+\vec{\mathbf{v}}\cdot \nabla \text{ | 
| 359 |  |  | is the total derivative} | 
| 360 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 361 |  |  |  | 
| 362 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 363 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }=\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}+\widehat{k}\frac{\partial }{\partial r} | 
| 364 |  |  | \text{ is the `grad' operator} | 
| 365 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 366 |  |  | with $\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}$ operating in the horizontal and $\widehat{k} | 
| 367 |  |  | \frac{\partial }{\partial r}$ operating in the vertical, where $\widehat{k}$ | 
| 368 |  |  | is a unit vector in the vertical | 
| 369 |  |  |  | 
| 370 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 371 |  |  | t\text{ is time} | 
| 372 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 373 |  |  |  | 
| 374 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 375 |  |  | \vec{\mathbf{v}}=(u,v,\dot{r})=(\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h},\dot{r})\text{ is the | 
| 376 |  |  | velocity} | 
| 377 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 378 |  |  |  | 
| 379 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 380 |  |  | \phi \text{ is the `pressure'/`geopotential'} | 
| 381 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 382 |  |  |  | 
| 383 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 384 |  |  | \vec{\Omega}\text{ is the Earth's rotation} | 
| 385 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 386 |  |  |  | 
| 387 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 388 |  |  | b\text{ is the `buoyancy'} | 
| 389 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 390 |  |  |  | 
| 391 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 392 |  |  | \theta \text{ is potential temperature} | 
| 393 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 394 |  |  |  | 
| 395 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 396 |  |  | S\text{ is specific humidity in the atmosphere; salinity in the ocean} | 
| 397 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 398 |  |  |  | 
| 399 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 400 |  |  | \mathcal{F}_{\vec{\mathbf{v}}}\text{ are forcing and dissipation of }\vec{ | 
| 401 |  |  | \mathbf{v}} | 
| 402 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 403 |  |  |  | 
| 404 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 405 |  |  | \mathcal{Q}_{\theta }\mathcal{\ }\text{are forcing and dissipation of }\theta | 
| 406 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 407 |  |  |  | 
| 408 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 409 |  |  | \mathcal{Q}_{S}\mathcal{\ }\text{are forcing and dissipation of }S | 
| 410 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 411 |  |  |  | 
| 412 |  |  | The $\mathcal{F}^{\prime }s$ and $\mathcal{Q}^{\prime }s$ are provided by | 
| 413 |  |  | extensive `physics' packages for atmosphere and ocean described in Chapter 6. | 
| 414 |  |  |  | 
| 415 |  |  | \subsection{Kinematic Boundary conditions} | 
| 416 |  |  |  | 
| 417 |  |  | \subsubsection{vertical} | 
| 418 |  |  |  | 
| 419 |  |  | at fixed and moving $r$ surfaces we set (see fig.5): | 
| 420 |  |  |  | 
| 421 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 422 |  |  | \dot{r}=0atr=R_{fixed}(x,y)\text{ (ocean bottom, top of the atmosphere)} | 
| 423 |  |  | \label{eq:fixedbc} | 
| 424 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 425 |  |  |  | 
| 426 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 427 |  |  | \dot{r}=\frac{Dr}{Dt}atr=R_{moving}\text{ \ | 
| 428 |  |  | (oceansurface,bottomoftheatmosphere)}  \label{eq:movingbc} | 
| 429 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 430 |  |  |  | 
| 431 |  |  | Here | 
| 432 |  |  |  | 
| 433 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 434 |  |  | R_{moving}=R_{o}+\eta | 
| 435 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 436 |  |  | where $R_{o}(x,y)$ is the `$r-$value' (height or pressure, depending on | 
| 437 |  |  | whether we are in the atmosphere or ocean) of the `moving surface' in the | 
| 438 |  |  | resting fluid and $\eta $ is the departure from $R_{o}(x,y)$ in the presence | 
| 439 |  |  | of motion. | 
| 440 |  |  |  | 
| 441 |  |  | \subsubsection{horizontal} | 
| 442 |  |  |  | 
| 443 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 444 |  |  | \vec{\mathbf{v}}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{n}}=0  \label{eq:noflow} | 
| 445 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 446 |  |  | where $\vec{\mathbf{n}}$ is the normal to a solid boundary. | 
| 447 |  |  |  | 
| 448 |  |  | \subsection{Atmosphere} | 
| 449 |  |  |  | 
| 450 |  |  | In the atmosphere, see fig.5, we interpret: | 
| 451 |  |  |  | 
| 452 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 453 |  |  | r=p\text{ is the pressure}  \label{eq:atmos-r} | 
| 454 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 455 |  |  |  | 
| 456 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 457 |  |  | \dot{r}=\frac{Dp}{Dt}=\omega \text{ is the vertical velocity in }p\text{ | 
| 458 |  |  | coordinates}  \label{eq:atmos-omega} | 
| 459 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 460 |  |  |  | 
| 461 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 462 |  |  | \phi =g\,z\text{ is the geopotential height}  \label{eq:atmos-phi} | 
| 463 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 464 |  |  |  | 
| 465 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 466 |  |  | b=\frac{\partial \Pi }{\partial p}\theta \text{ is the buoyancy} | 
| 467 |  |  | \label{eq:atmos-b} | 
| 468 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 469 |  |  |  | 
| 470 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 471 |  |  | \theta =T(\frac{p_{c}}{p})^{\kappa }\text{ is potential temperature} | 
| 472 |  |  | \label{eq:atmos-theta} | 
| 473 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 474 |  |  |  | 
| 475 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 476 |  |  | S=q,\text{ is the specific humidity}  \label{eq:atmos-s} | 
| 477 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 478 |  |  | where | 
| 479 |  |  |  | 
| 480 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 481 |  |  | T\text{ is absolute temperature} | 
| 482 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 483 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 484 |  |  | p\text{ is the pressure} | 
| 485 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 486 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray*} | 
| 487 |  |  | &&z\text{ is the height of the pressure surface} \\ | 
| 488 |  |  | &&g\text{ is the acceleration due to gravity} | 
| 489 |  |  | \end{eqnarray*} | 
| 490 |  |  |  | 
| 491 |  |  | In the above the ideal gas law, $p=\rho RT$, has been expressed in terms of | 
| 492 |  |  | the Exner function $\Pi (p)$ given by (see Appendix Atmosphere) | 
| 493 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 494 |  |  | \Pi (p)=c_{p}(\frac{p}{p_{c}})^{\kappa }  \label{eq:exner} | 
| 495 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 496 |  |  | where $p_{c}$ is a reference pressure and $\kappa =R/c_{p}$ with $R$ the gas | 
| 497 |  |  | constant and $c_{p}$ the specific heat of air at constant pressure. | 
| 498 |  |  |  | 
| 499 |  |  | At the top of the atmosphere (which is `fixed' in our $r$ coordinate): | 
| 500 |  |  |  | 
| 501 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 502 |  |  | R_{fixed}=p_{top}=0 | 
| 503 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 504 |  |  | In a resting atmosphere the elevation of the mountains at the bottom is | 
| 505 |  |  | given by | 
| 506 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 507 |  |  | R_{moving}=R_{o}(x,y)=p_{o}(x,y) | 
| 508 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 509 |  |  | i.e. the (hydrostatic) pressure at the top of the mountains in a resting | 
| 510 |  |  | atmosphere. | 
| 511 |  |  |  | 
| 512 |  |  | The boundary conditions at top and bottom are given by: | 
| 513 |  |  |  | 
| 514 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 515 |  |  | &&\omega =0~\text{at }r=R_{fixed} \text{ (top of the atmosphere)} | 
| 516 |  |  | \label{eq:fixed-bc-atmos} \\ | 
| 517 |  |  | \omega &=&\frac{Dp_{s}}{Dt}\text{; at }r=R_{moving}\text{ (bottom of the | 
| 518 |  |  | atmosphere)}  \label{eq:moving-bc-atmos} | 
| 519 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 520 |  |  |  | 
| 521 |  |  | Then the (hydrostatic form of) eq(\ref{eq:continuous}) yields a consistent | 
| 522 |  |  | set of atmospheric equations which, for convenience, are written out in $p$ | 
| 523 |  |  | coordinates in Appendix Atmosphere - see eqs(\ref{eq:atmos-prime}). | 
| 524 |  |  |  | 
| 525 |  |  | \subsection{Ocean} | 
| 526 |  |  |  | 
| 527 |  |  | In the ocean we interpret: | 
| 528 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 529 |  |  | r &=&z\text{ is the height}  \label{eq:ocean-z} \\ | 
| 530 |  |  | \dot{r} &=&\frac{Dz}{Dt}=w\text{ is the vertical velocity} | 
| 531 |  |  | \label{eq:ocean-w} \\ | 
| 532 |  |  | \phi &=&\frac{p}{\rho _{c}}\text{ is the pressure}  \label{eq:ocean-p} \\ | 
| 533 |  |  | b(\theta ,S,r) &=&\frac{g}{\rho _{c}}\left( \rho (\theta ,S,r)-\rho | 
| 534 |  |  | _{c}\right) \text{ is the buoyancy}  \label{eq:ocean-b} | 
| 535 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 536 |  |  | where $\rho _{c}$ is a fixed reference density of water and $g$ is the | 
| 537 |  |  | acceleration due to gravity.\noindent | 
| 538 |  |  |  | 
| 539 |  |  | In the above | 
| 540 |  |  |  | 
| 541 |  |  | At the bottom of the ocean: $R_{fixed}(x,y)=-H(x,y)$. | 
| 542 |  |  |  | 
| 543 |  |  | The surface of the ocean is given by: $R_{moving}=\eta $ | 
| 544 |  |  |  | 
| 545 |  |  | The position of the resting free surface of the ocean is given by $ | 
| 546 |  |  | R_{o}=Z_{o}=0$. | 
| 547 |  |  |  | 
| 548 |  |  | Boundary conditions are: | 
| 549 |  |  |  | 
| 550 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 551 |  |  | w &=&0~\text{at }r=R_{fixed}\text{ (ocean bottom)}  \label{eq:fixed-bc-ocean} | 
| 552 |  |  | \\ | 
| 553 |  |  | w &=&\frac{D\eta }{Dt}\text{ at }r=R_{moving}=\eta \text{ (ocean surface) | 
| 554 |  |  | \label{eq:moving-bc-ocean}} | 
| 555 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 556 |  |  | where $\eta $ is the elevation of the free surface. | 
| 557 |  |  |  | 
| 558 |  |  | Then eq(\ref{eq:continuous}) yields a consistent set of oceanic equations | 
| 559 |  |  | which, for convenience, are written out in $z$ coordinates in Appendix Ocean | 
| 560 |  |  | - see eqs(\ref{eq:ocean-mom}) to (\ref{eq:ocean-salt}). | 
| 561 |  |  |  | 
| 562 |  |  | \subsection{Hydrostatic, Quasi-hydrostatic, Quasi-nonhydrostatic and | 
| 563 |  |  | Non-hydrostatic forms} | 
| 564 |  |  |  | 
| 565 |  |  | Let us separate $\phi $ in to surface, hydrostatic and non-hydrostatic terms: | 
| 566 |  |  |  | 
| 567 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 568 |  |  | \phi (x,y,r)=\phi _{s}(x,y)+\phi _{hyd}(x,y,r)+\phi _{nh}(x,y,r) | 
| 569 |  |  | \label{eq:phi-split} | 
| 570 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 571 |  |  | and write eq(\ref{incompressible}a,b) in the form: | 
| 572 |  |  |  | 
| 573 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 574 |  |  | \frac{\partial \vec{\mathbf{v}_{h}}}{\partial t}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\phi | 
| 575 |  |  | _{s}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\phi _{hyd}+\epsilon _{nh}\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\phi | 
| 576 |  |  | _{nh}=\vec{\mathbf{G}}_{\vec{v}_{h}}  \label{eq:mom-h} | 
| 577 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 578 |  |  |  | 
| 579 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 580 |  |  | \frac{\partial \phi _{hyd}}{\partial r}=-b  \label{eq:hydrostatic} | 
| 581 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 582 |  |  |  | 
| 583 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 584 |  |  | \epsilon _{nh}\frac{\partial \dot{r}}{\partial t}+\frac{\partial \phi _{nh}}{ | 
| 585 |  |  | \partial r}=G_{\dot{r}}  \label{eq:mom-w} | 
| 586 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 587 |  |  | Here $\epsilon _{nh}$ is a non-hydrostatic parameter. | 
| 588 |  |  |  | 
| 589 |  |  | The $\left( \vec{\mathbf{G}}_{\vec{v}},G_{\dot{r}}\right) $ in eq(\ref | 
| 590 |  |  | {eq:mom-h}) and (\ref{eq:mom-w}) represent advective, metric and Coriolis | 
| 591 |  |  | terms in the momentum equations. In spherical coordinates they take the form | 
| 592 |  |  | \footnote{ | 
| 593 |  |  | In the hydrostatic primitive equations (\textbf{HPE}) all underlined terms | 
| 594 |  |  | in (\ref{eq:gu-speherical}), (\ref{eq:gv-spherical}) and (\ref | 
| 595 |  |  | {eq:gw-spherical}) are omitted; the singly-underlined terms are included in | 
| 596 |  |  | the quasi-hydrostatic model (\textbf{QH}). The fully non-hydrostatic model ( | 
| 597 |  |  | \textbf{NH}) includes all terms.} - see Marshall et al 1997a for a full | 
| 598 |  |  | discussion: | 
| 599 |  |  |  | 
| 600 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 601 |  |  | \left. | 
| 602 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{l} | 
| 603 |  |  | $G_{u}=-\vec{\mathbf{v}}.\nabla u$ \\ | 
| 604 |  |  | $-\left\{ \underline{\frac{u\dot{r}}{{r}}}-\frac{uv\tan lat}{{r}}\right\} $ | 
| 605 |  |  | \\ | 
| 606 |  |  | $-\left\{ -2\Omega v\sin lat+\underline{2\Omega \dot{r}\cos lat}\right\} $ | 
| 607 |  |  | \\ | 
| 608 |  |  | $+\mathcal{F}_{u}$ | 
| 609 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 610 |  |  | \ \right\} \left\{ | 
| 611 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{l} | 
| 612 |  |  | \textit{advection} \\ | 
| 613 |  |  | \textit{metric} \\ | 
| 614 |  |  | \textit{Coriolis} \\ | 
| 615 |  |  | \textit{\ Forcing/Dissipation} | 
| 616 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 617 |  |  | \ \right. \qquad  \label{eq:gu-speherical} | 
| 618 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 619 |  |  |  | 
| 620 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 621 |  |  | \left. | 
| 622 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{l} | 
| 623 |  |  | $G_{v}=-\vec{\mathbf{v}}.\nabla v$ \\ | 
| 624 |  |  | $-\left\{ \underline{\frac{v\dot{r}}{{r}}}-\frac{u^{2}\tan lat}{{r}}\right\} | 
| 625 |  |  | $ \\ | 
| 626 |  |  | $-\left\{ -2\Omega u\sin lat\right\} $ \\ | 
| 627 |  |  | $+\mathcal{F}_{v}$ | 
| 628 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 629 |  |  | \ \right\} \left\{ | 
| 630 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{l} | 
| 631 |  |  | \textit{advection} \\ | 
| 632 |  |  | \textit{metric} \\ | 
| 633 |  |  | \textit{Coriolis} \\ | 
| 634 |  |  | \textit{\ Forcing/Dissipation} | 
| 635 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 636 |  |  | \ \right. \qquad  \label{eq:gv-spherical} | 
| 637 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 638 |  |  | \qquad \qquad \qquad \qquad \qquad | 
| 639 |  |  |  | 
| 640 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 641 |  |  | \left. | 
| 642 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{l} | 
| 643 |  |  | $G_{\dot{r}}=-\underline{\underline{\vec{\mathbf{v}}.\nabla \dot{r}}}$ \\ | 
| 644 |  |  | $+\left\{ \underline{\frac{u^{_{^{2}}}+v^{2}}{{r}}}\right\} $ \\ | 
| 645 |  |  | ${+}\underline{{2\Omega u\cos lat}}$ \\ | 
| 646 |  |  | $\underline{\underline{\mathcal{F}_{\dot{r}}}}$ | 
| 647 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 648 |  |  | \ \right\} \left\{ | 
| 649 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{l} | 
| 650 |  |  | \textit{advection} \\ | 
| 651 |  |  | \textit{metric} \\ | 
| 652 |  |  | \textit{Coriolis} \\ | 
| 653 |  |  | \textit{\ Forcing/Dissipation} | 
| 654 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 655 |  |  | \ \right.  \label{eq:gw-spherical} | 
| 656 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 657 |  |  | \qquad \qquad \qquad \qquad \qquad | 
| 658 |  |  |  | 
| 659 |  |  | In the above `${r}$' is the distance from the center of the earth and `$lat$ | 
| 660 |  |  | ' is latitude. | 
| 661 |  |  |  | 
| 662 |  |  | Grad and div operators in spherical coordinates are defined in appendix | 
| 663 |  |  | OPERATORS. | 
| 664 |  |  | \marginpar{ | 
| 665 |  |  | Fig.6 Spherical polar coordinate system.} | 
| 666 |  |  |  | 
| 667 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 668 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/sphere_coord_figure.tex} | 
| 669 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 670 |  |  |  | 
| 671 |  |  | \subsubsection{Shallow atmosphere approximation} | 
| 672 |  |  |  | 
| 673 |  |  | Most models are based on the `hydrostatic primitive equations' (HPE's) in | 
| 674 |  |  | which the vertical momentum equation is reduced to a statement of | 
| 675 |  |  | hydrostatic balance and the `traditional approximation' is made in which the | 
| 676 |  |  | Coriolis force is treated approximately and the shallow atmosphere | 
| 677 |  |  | approximation is made.\ The MITgcm need not make the `traditional | 
| 678 |  |  | approximation'. To be able to support consistent non-hydrostatic forms the | 
| 679 |  |  | shallow atmosphere approximation can be relaxed - when dividing through by $ | 
| 680 |  |  | r $ in, for example, (\ref{eq:gu-speherical}), we do not replace $r$ by $a$, | 
| 681 |  |  | the radius of the earth. | 
| 682 |  |  |  | 
| 683 |  |  | \subsubsection{Hydrostatic and quasi-hydrostatic forms} | 
| 684 |  |  |  | 
| 685 |  |  | These are discussed at length in Marshall et al (1997a). | 
| 686 |  |  |  | 
| 687 |  |  | In the `hydrostatic primitive equations' (\textbf{HPE)} all the underlined | 
| 688 |  |  | terms in Eqs. (\ref{eq:gu-speherical} $\rightarrow $\ \ref{eq:gw-spherical}) | 
| 689 |  |  | are neglected and `${r}$' is replaced by `$a$', the mean radius of the | 
| 690 |  |  | earth. Once the pressure is found at one level - e.g. by inverting a 2-d | 
| 691 |  |  | Elliptic equation for $\phi _{s}$ at $r=R_{moving}$ - the pressure can be | 
| 692 |  |  | computed at all other levels by integration of the hydrostatic relation, eq( | 
| 693 |  |  | \ref{eq:hydrostatic}). | 
| 694 |  |  |  | 
| 695 |  |  | In the `quasi-hydrostatic' equations (\textbf{QH)} strict balance between | 
| 696 |  |  | gravity and vertical pressure gradients is not imposed. The $2\Omega u\cos | 
| 697 |  |  | \phi $ Coriolis term are not neglected and are balanced by a non-hydrostatic | 
| 698 |  |  | contribution to the pressure field: only the terms underlined twice in Eqs. ( | 
| 699 |  |  | \ref{eq:gu-speherical}$\rightarrow $\ \ref{eq:gw-spherical}) are set to zero | 
| 700 |  |  | and, simultaneously, the shallow atmosphere approximation is relaxed. In | 
| 701 |  |  | \textbf{QH}\ \textit{all} the metric terms are retained and the full | 
| 702 |  |  | variation of the radial position of a particle monitored. The \textbf{QH}\ | 
| 703 |  |  | vertical momentum equation (\ref{eq:mom-w}) becomes: | 
| 704 |  |  |  | 
| 705 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 706 |  |  | \frac{\partial \phi _{nh}}{\partial r}=2\Omega u\cos lat | 
| 707 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 708 |  |  | making a small correction to the hydrostatic pressure. | 
| 709 |  |  |  | 
| 710 |  |  | \textbf{QH} has good energetic credentials - they are the same as for | 
| 711 |  |  | \textbf{HPE}. Importantly, however, it has the same angular momentum | 
| 712 |  |  | principle as the full non-hydrostatic model (\textbf{NH)} - see Marshall | 
| 713 |  |  | et.al., 1997a. As in \textbf{HPE }only a 2-d elliptic problem need be solved. | 
| 714 |  |  |  | 
| 715 |  |  | \subsubsection{Non-hydrostatic and quasi-nonhydrostatic forms} | 
| 716 |  |  |  | 
| 717 |  |  | The MIT model presently supports a full non-hydrostatic ocean isomorph, but | 
| 718 |  |  | only a quasi-non-hydrostatic atmospheric isomorph. | 
| 719 |  |  |  | 
| 720 |  |  | \paragraph{Non-hydrostatic Ocean} | 
| 721 |  |  |  | 
| 722 |  |  | In the non-hydrostatic ocean model all terms in equations Eqs.(\ref | 
| 723 |  |  | {eq:gu-speherical} $\rightarrow $\ \ref{eq:gw-spherical}) are retained. A | 
| 724 |  |  | three dimensional elliptic equation must be solved subject to Neumann | 
| 725 |  |  | boundary conditions (see below). It is important to note that use of the | 
| 726 |  |  | full \textbf{NH} does not admit any new `fast' waves in to the system - the | 
| 727 |  |  | incompressible condition eq(\ref{eq:continuous})c has already filtered out | 
| 728 |  |  | acoustic modes. It does, however, ensure that the gravity waves are treated | 
| 729 |  |  | accurately with an exact dispersion relation. The \textbf{NH} set has a | 
| 730 |  |  | complete angular momentum principle and consistent energetics - see White | 
| 731 |  |  | and Bromley, 1995; Marshall et.al.\ 1997a. | 
| 732 |  |  |  | 
| 733 |  |  | \paragraph{Quasi-nonhydrostatic Atmosphere} | 
| 734 |  |  |  | 
| 735 |  |  | In the non-hydrostatic version of our atmospheric model we approximate $\dot{ | 
| 736 |  |  | r}$ in the vertical momentum eqs(\ref{eq:mom-w}) and (\ref{eq:gv-spherical}) | 
| 737 |  |  | (but only here) by: | 
| 738 |  |  |  | 
| 739 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 740 |  |  | \dot{r}=\frac{Dp}{Dt}=\frac{1}{g}\frac{D\phi }{Dt}  \label{eq:quasi-nh-w} | 
| 741 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 742 |  |  | where $p_{hy}$ is the hydrostatic pressure. | 
| 743 |  |  |  | 
| 744 |  |  | \subsubsection{Summary of equation sets supported by model} | 
| 745 |  |  |  | 
| 746 |  |  | \paragraph{Atmosphere} | 
| 747 |  |  |  | 
| 748 |  |  | Hydrostatic, and quasi-hydrostatic and quasi non-hydrostatic forms of the | 
| 749 |  |  | compressible non-Boussinesq equations in $p-$coordinates are supported. | 
| 750 |  |  |  | 
| 751 |  |  | \subparagraph{Hydrostatic and quasi-hydrostatic} | 
| 752 |  |  |  | 
| 753 |  |  | The hydrostatic set is written out in $p-$coordinates in appendix Atmosphere | 
| 754 |  |  | - see eq(\ref{eq:atmos-prime}). | 
| 755 |  |  |  | 
| 756 |  |  | \subparagraph{Quasi-nonhydrostatic} | 
| 757 |  |  |  | 
| 758 |  |  | A quasi-nonhydrostatic form is also supported. | 
| 759 |  |  |  | 
| 760 |  |  | \paragraph{Ocean} | 
| 761 |  |  |  | 
| 762 |  |  | \subparagraph{Hydrostatic and quasi-hydrostatic} | 
| 763 |  |  |  | 
| 764 |  |  | Hydrostatic, and quasi-hydrostatic forms of the incompressible Boussinesq | 
| 765 |  |  | equations in $z-$coordinates are supported. | 
| 766 |  |  |  | 
| 767 |  |  | \subparagraph{Non-hydrostatic} | 
| 768 |  |  |  | 
| 769 |  |  | Non-hydrostatic forms of the incompressible Boussinesq equations in $z-$ | 
| 770 |  |  | coordinates are supported - see eqs(\ref{eq:ocean-mom}) to (\ref | 
| 771 |  |  | {eq:ocean-salt}). | 
| 772 |  |  |  | 
| 773 |  |  | \subsection{Solution strategy} | 
| 774 |  |  |  | 
| 775 |  |  | The method of solution employed in the \textbf{HPE}, \textbf{QH} and \textbf{ | 
| 776 |  |  | NH} models is summarized in Fig.7. | 
| 777 |  |  | \marginpar{ | 
| 778 |  |  | Fig.7 Solution strategy} Under all dynamics, a 2-d elliptic equation is | 
| 779 |  |  | first solved to find the surface pressure and the hydrostatic pressure at | 
| 780 |  |  | any level computed from the weight of fluid above. Under \textbf{HPE} and | 
| 781 |  |  | \textbf{QH} dynamics, the horizontal momentum equations are then stepped | 
| 782 |  |  | forward and $\dot{r}$ found from continuity. Under \textbf{NH} dynamics a | 
| 783 |  |  | 3-d elliptic equation must be solved for the non-hydrostatic pressure before | 
| 784 |  |  | stepping forward the horizontal momentum equations; $\dot{r}$ is found by | 
| 785 |  |  | stepping forward the vertical momentum equation. | 
| 786 |  |  |  | 
| 787 |  |  | %%CNHbegin | 
| 788 |  |  | %notci%\input{part1/solution_strategy_figure.tex} | 
| 789 |  |  | %%CNHend | 
| 790 |  |  |  | 
| 791 |  |  | There is no penalty in implementing \textbf{QH} over \textbf{HPE} except, of | 
| 792 |  |  | course, some complication that goes with the inclusion of $\cos \phi \ $ | 
| 793 |  |  | Coriolis terms and the relaxation of the shallow atmosphere approximation. | 
| 794 |  |  | But this leads to negligible increase in computation. In \textbf{NH}, in | 
| 795 |  |  | contrast, one additional elliptic equation - a three-dimensional one - must | 
| 796 |  |  | be inverted for $p_{nh}$. However the `overhead' of the \textbf{NH} model is | 
| 797 |  |  | essentially negligible in the hydrostatic limit (see detailed discussion in | 
| 798 |  |  | Marshall et al, 1997) resulting in a non-hydrostatic algorithm that, in the | 
| 799 |  |  | hydrostatic limit, is as computationally economic as the \textbf{HPEs}. | 
| 800 |  |  |  | 
| 801 |  |  | \subsection{Finding the pressure field} | 
| 802 |  |  |  | 
| 803 |  |  | Unlike the prognostic variables $u$, $v$, $w$, $\theta $ and $S$, the | 
| 804 |  |  | pressure field must be obtained diagnostically. We proceed, as before, by | 
| 805 |  |  | dividing the total (pressure/geo) potential in to three parts, a surface | 
| 806 |  |  | part, $\phi _{s}(x,y)$, a hydrostatic part $\phi _{hyd}(x,y,r)$ and a | 
| 807 |  |  | non-hydrostatic part $\phi _{nh}(x,y,r)$, as in (\ref{eq:phi-split}), and | 
| 808 |  |  | writing the momentum equation as in (\ref{eq:mom-h}). | 
| 809 |  |  |  | 
| 810 |  |  | \subsubsection{Hydrostatic pressure} | 
| 811 |  |  |  | 
| 812 |  |  | Hydrostatic pressure is obtained by integrating (\ref{eq:hydrostatic}) | 
| 813 |  |  | vertically from $r=R_{o}$ where $\phi _{hyd}(r=R_{o})=0$, to yield: | 
| 814 |  |  |  | 
| 815 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 816 |  |  | \int_{r}^{R_{o}}\frac{\partial \phi _{hyd}}{\partial r}dr=\left[ \phi _{hyd} | 
| 817 |  |  | \right] _{r}^{R_{o}}=\int_{r}^{R_{o}}-bdr | 
| 818 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 819 |  |  | and so | 
| 820 |  |  |  | 
| 821 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 822 |  |  | \phi _{hyd}(x,y,r)=\int_{r}^{R_{o}}bdr  \label{eq:hydro-phi} | 
| 823 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 824 |  |  |  | 
| 825 |  |  | The model can be easily modified to accommodate a loading term (e.g | 
| 826 |  |  | atmospheric pressure pushing down on the ocean's surface) by setting: | 
| 827 |  |  |  | 
| 828 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 829 |  |  | \phi _{hyd}(r=R_{o})=loading  \label{eq:loading} | 
| 830 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 831 |  |  |  | 
| 832 |  |  | \subsubsection{Surface pressure} | 
| 833 |  |  |  | 
| 834 |  |  | The surface pressure equation can be obtained by integrating continuity, ( | 
| 835 |  |  | \ref{eq:continuous})c, vertically from $r=R_{fixed}$ to $r=R_{moving}$ | 
| 836 |  |  |  | 
| 837 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 838 |  |  | \int_{R_{fixed}}^{R_{moving}}\left( \mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v} | 
| 839 |  |  | }_{h}+\partial _{r}\dot{r}\right) dr=0 | 
| 840 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 841 |  |  |  | 
| 842 |  |  | Thus: | 
| 843 |  |  |  | 
| 844 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 845 |  |  | \frac{\partial \eta }{\partial t}+\vec{\mathbf{v}}.\nabla \eta | 
| 846 |  |  | +\int_{R_{fixed}}^{R_{moving}}\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 847 |  |  | _{h}dr=0 | 
| 848 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 849 |  |  | where $\eta =R_{moving}-R_{o}$ is the free-surface $r$-anomaly in units of $ | 
| 850 |  |  | r $. The above can be rearranged to yield, using Leibnitz's theorem: | 
| 851 |  |  |  | 
| 852 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 853 |  |  | \frac{\partial \eta }{\partial t}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\cdot | 
| 854 |  |  | \int_{R_{fixed}}^{R_{moving}}\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}dr=\text{source} | 
| 855 |  |  | \label{eq:free-surface} | 
| 856 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 857 |  |  | where we have incorporated a source term. | 
| 858 |  |  |  | 
| 859 |  |  | Whether $\phi $ is pressure (ocean model, $p/\rho _{c}$) or geopotential | 
| 860 |  |  | (atmospheric model), in (\ref{mtm-split}), the horizontal gradient term can | 
| 861 |  |  | be written | 
| 862 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 863 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\phi _{s}=\mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\left( b_{s}\eta \right) | 
| 864 |  |  | \label{eq:phi-surf} | 
| 865 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 866 |  |  | where $b_{s}$ is the buoyancy at the surface. | 
| 867 |  |  |  | 
| 868 |  |  | In the hydrostatic limit ($\epsilon _{nh}=0$), Eqs(\ref{eq:mom-h}), (\ref | 
| 869 |  |  | {eq:free-surface}) and (\ref{eq:phi-surf}) can be solved by inverting a 2-d | 
| 870 |  |  | elliptic equation for $\phi _{s}$ as described in Chapter 2. Both `free | 
| 871 |  |  | surface' and `rigid lid' approaches are available. | 
| 872 |  |  |  | 
| 873 |  |  | \subsubsection{Non-hydrostatic pressure} | 
| 874 |  |  |  | 
| 875 |  |  | Taking the horizontal divergence of (\ref{hor-mtm}) and adding $\frac{ | 
| 876 |  |  | \partial }{\partial r}$ of (\ref{vertmtm}), invoking the continuity equation | 
| 877 |  |  | (\ref{incompressible}), we deduce that: | 
| 878 |  |  |  | 
| 879 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 880 |  |  | \nabla _{3}^{2}\phi _{nh}=\nabla .\vec{\mathbf{G}}_{\vec{v}}-\left( \mathbf{ | 
| 881 |  |  | \nabla }_{h}^{2}\phi _{s}+\mathbf{\nabla }^{2}\phi _{hyd}\right) =\nabla . | 
| 882 |  |  | \vec{\mathbf{F}}  \label{eq:3d-invert} | 
| 883 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 884 |  |  |  | 
| 885 |  |  | For a given rhs this 3-d elliptic equation must be inverted for $\phi _{nh}$ | 
| 886 |  |  | subject to appropriate choice of boundary conditions. This method is usually | 
| 887 |  |  | called \textit{The Pressure Method} [Harlow and Welch, 1965; Williams, 1969; | 
| 888 |  |  | Potter, 1976]. In the hydrostatic primitive equations case (\textbf{HPE}), | 
| 889 |  |  | the 3-d problem does not need to be solved. | 
| 890 |  |  |  | 
| 891 |  |  | \paragraph{Boundary Conditions} | 
| 892 |  |  |  | 
| 893 |  |  | We apply the condition of no normal flow through all solid boundaries - the | 
| 894 |  |  | coasts (in the ocean) and the bottom: | 
| 895 |  |  |  | 
| 896 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 897 |  |  | \vec{\mathbf{v}}.\widehat{n}=0  \label{nonormalflow} | 
| 898 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 899 |  |  | where $\widehat{n}$ is a vector of unit length normal to the boundary. The | 
| 900 |  |  | kinematic condition (\ref{nonormalflow}) is also applied to the vertical | 
| 901 |  |  | velocity at $r=R_{moving}$. No-slip $\left( v_{T}=0\right) \ $or slip $ | 
| 902 |  |  | \left( \partial v_{T}/\partial n=0\right) \ $conditions are employed on the | 
| 903 |  |  | tangential component of velocity, $v_{T}$, at all solid boundaries, | 
| 904 |  |  | depending on the form chosen for the dissipative terms in the momentum | 
| 905 |  |  | equations - see below. | 
| 906 |  |  |  | 
| 907 |  |  | Eq.(\ref{nonormalflow}) implies, making use of (\ref{mtm-split}), that: | 
| 908 |  |  |  | 
| 909 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 910 |  |  | \widehat{n}.\nabla \phi _{nh}=\widehat{n}.\vec{\mathbf{F}} | 
| 911 |  |  | \label{eq:inhom-neumann-nh} | 
| 912 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 913 |  |  | where | 
| 914 |  |  |  | 
| 915 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 916 |  |  | \vec{\mathbf{F}}=\vec{\mathbf{G}}_{\vec{v}}-\left( \mathbf{\nabla }_{h}\phi | 
| 917 |  |  | _{s}+\mathbf{\nabla }\phi _{hyd}\right) | 
| 918 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 919 |  |  | presenting inhomogeneous Neumann boundary conditions to the Elliptic problem | 
| 920 |  |  | (\ref{eq:3d-invert}). As shown, for example, by Williams (1969), one can | 
| 921 |  |  | exploit classical 3D potential theory and, by introducing an appropriately | 
| 922 |  |  | chosen $\delta $-function sheet of `source-charge', replace the | 
| 923 |  |  | inhomogeneous boundary condition on pressure by a homogeneous one. The | 
| 924 |  |  | source term $rhs$ in (\ref{eq:3d-invert}) is the divergence of the vector $ | 
| 925 |  |  | \vec{\mathbf{F}}.$ By simultaneously setting $ | 
| 926 |  |  | \begin{array}{l} | 
| 927 |  |  | \widehat{n}.\vec{\mathbf{F}} | 
| 928 |  |  | \end{array} | 
| 929 |  |  | =0$\ and $\widehat{n}.\nabla \phi _{nh}=0\ $on the boundary the following | 
| 930 |  |  | self-consistent but simpler homogenized Elliptic problem is obtained: | 
| 931 |  |  |  | 
| 932 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 933 |  |  | \nabla ^{2}\phi _{nh}=\nabla .\widetilde{\vec{\mathbf{F}}}\qquad | 
| 934 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 935 |  |  | where $\widetilde{\vec{\mathbf{F}}}$ is a modified $\vec{\mathbf{F}}$ such | 
| 936 |  |  | that $\widetilde{\vec{\mathbf{F}}}.\widehat{n}=0$. As is implied by (\ref | 
| 937 |  |  | {eq:inhom-neumann-nh}) the modified boundary condition becomes: | 
| 938 |  |  |  | 
| 939 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 940 |  |  | \widehat{n}.\nabla \phi _{nh}=0  \label{eq:hom-neumann-nh} | 
| 941 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 942 |  |  |  | 
| 943 |  |  | If the flow is `close' to hydrostatic balance then the 3-d inversion | 
| 944 |  |  | converges rapidly because $\phi _{nh}\ $is then only a small correction to | 
| 945 |  |  | the hydrostatic pressure field (see the discussion in Marshall et al, a,b). | 
| 946 |  |  |  | 
| 947 |  |  | The solution $\phi _{nh}\ $to (\ref{eq:3d-invert}) and (\ref{homneuman}) | 
| 948 |  |  | does not vanish at $r=R_{moving}$, and so refines the pressure there. | 
| 949 |  |  |  | 
| 950 |  |  | \subsection{Forcing/dissipation} | 
| 951 |  |  |  | 
| 952 |  |  | \subsubsection{Forcing} | 
| 953 |  |  |  | 
| 954 |  |  | The forcing terms $\mathcal{F}$ on the rhs of the equations are provided by | 
| 955 |  |  | `physics packages' described in detail in chapter ??. | 
| 956 |  |  |  | 
| 957 |  |  | \subsubsection{Dissipation} | 
| 958 |  |  |  | 
| 959 |  |  | \paragraph{Momentum} | 
| 960 |  |  |  | 
| 961 |  |  | Many forms of momentum dissipation are available in the model. Laplacian and | 
| 962 |  |  | biharmonic frictions are commonly used: | 
| 963 |  |  |  | 
| 964 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 965 |  |  | D_{V}=A_{h}\nabla _{h}^{2}v+A_{v}\frac{\partial ^{2}v}{\partial z^{2}} | 
| 966 |  |  | +A_{4}\nabla _{h}^{4}v  \label{eq:dissipation} | 
| 967 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 968 |  |  | where $A_{h}$ and $A_{v}\ $are (constant) horizontal and vertical viscosity | 
| 969 |  |  | coefficients and $A_{4}\ $is the horizontal coefficient for biharmonic | 
| 970 |  |  | friction. These coefficients are the same for all velocity components. | 
| 971 |  |  |  | 
| 972 |  |  | \paragraph{Tracers} | 
| 973 |  |  |  | 
| 974 |  |  | The mixing terms for the temperature and salinity equations have a similar | 
| 975 |  |  | form to that of momentum except that the diffusion tensor can be | 
| 976 |  |  | non-diagonal and have varying coefficients. $\qquad $ | 
| 977 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 978 |  |  | D_{T,S}=\nabla .[\underline{\underline{K}}\nabla (T,S)]+K_{4}\nabla | 
| 979 |  |  | _{h}^{4}(T,S)  \label{eq:diffusion} | 
| 980 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 981 |  |  | where $\underline{\underline{K}}\ $is the diffusion tensor and the $K_{4}\ $ | 
| 982 |  |  | horizontal coefficient for biharmonic diffusion. In the simplest case where | 
| 983 |  |  | the subgrid-scale fluxes of heat and salt are parameterized with constant | 
| 984 |  |  | horizontal and vertical diffusion coefficients, $\underline{\underline{K}}$, | 
| 985 |  |  | reduces to a diagonal matrix with constant coefficients: | 
| 986 |  |  |  | 
| 987 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 988 |  |  | \qquad \qquad \qquad \qquad K=\left( | 
| 989 |  |  | \begin{array}{ccc} | 
| 990 |  |  | K_{h} & 0 & 0 \\ | 
| 991 |  |  | 0 & K_{h} & 0 \\ | 
| 992 |  |  | 0 & 0 & K_{v} | 
| 993 |  |  | \end{array} | 
| 994 |  |  | \right) \qquad \qquad \qquad  \label{eq:diagonal-diffusion-tensor} | 
| 995 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 996 |  |  | where $K_{h}\ $and $K_{v}\ $are the horizontal and vertical diffusion | 
| 997 |  |  | coefficients. These coefficients are the same for all tracers (temperature, | 
| 998 |  |  | salinity ... ). | 
| 999 |  |  |  | 
| 1000 |  |  | \subsection{Vector invariant form} | 
| 1001 |  |  |  | 
| 1002 |  |  | For some purposes it is advantageous to write momentum advection in eq(\ref | 
| 1003 |  |  | {hor-mtm}) and (\ref{vertmtm}) in the (so-called) `vector invariant' form: | 
| 1004 |  |  |  | 
| 1005 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1006 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}}{Dt}=\frac{\partial \vec{\mathbf{v}}}{\partial t} | 
| 1007 |  |  | +\left( \nabla \times \vec{\mathbf{v}}\right) \times \vec{\mathbf{v}}+\nabla | 
| 1008 |  |  | \left[ \frac{1}{2}(\vec{\mathbf{v}}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}})\right] | 
| 1009 |  |  | \label{eq:vi-identity} | 
| 1010 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1011 |  |  | This permits alternative numerical treatments of the non-linear terms based | 
| 1012 |  |  | on their representation as a vorticity flux. Because gradients of coordinate | 
| 1013 |  |  | vectors no longer appear on the rhs of (\ref{eq:vi-identity}), explicit | 
| 1014 |  |  | representation of the metric terms in (\ref{eq:gu-speherical}), (\ref | 
| 1015 |  |  | {eq:gv-spherical}) and (\ref{eq:gw-spherical}), can be avoided: information | 
| 1016 |  |  | about the geometry is contained in the areas and lengths of the volumes used | 
| 1017 |  |  | to discretize the model. | 
| 1018 |  |  |  | 
| 1019 |  |  | \subsection{Adjoint} | 
| 1020 |  |  |  | 
| 1021 |  |  | Tangent linear and adjoint counterparts of the forward model and described | 
| 1022 |  |  | in Chapter 5. | 
| 1023 |  |  |  | 
| 1024 | adcroft | 1.2 | % $Header: /u/gcmpack/mitgcmdoc/part1/manual.src,v 1.1 2001/10/11 19:36:56 adcroft Exp $ | 
| 1025 | adcroft | 1.1 | % $Name:  $ | 
| 1026 |  |  |  | 
| 1027 |  |  | \section{Appendix ATMOSPHERE} | 
| 1028 |  |  |  | 
| 1029 |  |  | \subsection{Hydrostatic Primitive Equations for the Atmosphere in pressure | 
| 1030 |  |  | coordinates} | 
| 1031 |  |  |  | 
| 1032 |  |  | \label{sect-hpe-p} | 
| 1033 |  |  |  | 
| 1034 |  |  | The hydrostatic primitive equations (HPEs) in p-coordinates are: | 
| 1035 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1036 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}}{Dt}+f\hat{\mathbf{k}}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1037 |  |  | _{h}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{p}\phi &=&\vec{\mathbf{\mathcal{F}}} | 
| 1038 |  |  | \label{eq:atmos-mom} \\ | 
| 1039 |  |  | \frac{\partial \phi }{\partial p}+\alpha &=&0  \label{eq-p-hydro-start} \\ | 
| 1040 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{p}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{\partial \omega }{ | 
| 1041 |  |  | \partial p} &=&0  \label{eq:atmos-cont} \\ | 
| 1042 |  |  | p\alpha &=&RT  \label{eq:atmos-eos} \\ | 
| 1043 |  |  | c_{v}\frac{DT}{Dt}+p\frac{D\alpha }{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}  \label{eq:atmos-heat} | 
| 1044 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1045 |  |  | where $\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}=(u,v,0)$ is the `horizontal' (on pressure | 
| 1046 |  |  | surfaces) component of velocity,$\frac{D}{Dt}=\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}\cdot | 
| 1047 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{p}+\omega \frac{\partial }{\partial p}$ is the total | 
| 1048 |  |  | derivative, $f=2\Omega \sin lat$ is the Coriolis parameter, $\phi =gz$ is | 
| 1049 |  |  | the geopotential, $\alpha =1/\rho $ is the specific volume, $\omega =\frac{Dp | 
| 1050 |  |  | }{Dt}$ is the vertical velocity in the $p-$coordinate. Equation(\ref | 
| 1051 |  |  | {eq:atmos-heat}) is the first law of thermodynamics where internal energy $ | 
| 1052 |  |  | e=c_{v}T$, $T$ is temperature, $Q$ is the rate of heating per unit mass and $ | 
| 1053 |  |  | p\frac{D\alpha }{Dt}$ is the work done by the fluid in compressing. | 
| 1054 |  |  |  | 
| 1055 |  |  | It is convenient to cast the heat equation in terms of potential temperature | 
| 1056 |  |  | $\theta $ so that it looks more like a generic conservation law. | 
| 1057 |  |  | Differentiating (\ref{eq:atmos-eos}) we get: | 
| 1058 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1059 |  |  | p\frac{D\alpha }{Dt}+\alpha \frac{Dp}{Dt}=R\frac{DT}{Dt} | 
| 1060 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1061 |  |  | which, when added to the heat equation (\ref{eq:atmos-heat}) and using $ | 
| 1062 |  |  | c_{p}=c_{v}+R$, gives: | 
| 1063 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1064 |  |  | c_{p}\frac{DT}{Dt}-\alpha \frac{Dp}{Dt}=\mathcal{Q} | 
| 1065 |  |  | \label{eq-p-heat-interim} | 
| 1066 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1067 |  |  | Potential temperature is defined: | 
| 1068 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1069 |  |  | \theta =T(\frac{p_{c}}{p})^{\kappa }  \label{eq:potential-temp} | 
| 1070 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1071 |  |  | where $p_{c}$ is a reference pressure and $\kappa =R/c_{p}$. For convenience | 
| 1072 |  |  | we will make use of the Exner function $\Pi (p)$ which defined by: | 
| 1073 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1074 |  |  | \Pi (p)=c_{p}(\frac{p}{p_{c}})^{\kappa }  \label{Exner} | 
| 1075 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1076 |  |  | The following relations will be useful and are easily expressed in terms of | 
| 1077 |  |  | the Exner function: | 
| 1078 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1079 |  |  | c_{p}T=\Pi \theta \;\;;\;\;\frac{\partial \Pi }{\partial p}=\frac{\kappa \Pi | 
| 1080 |  |  | }{p}\;\;;\;\;\alpha =\frac{\kappa \Pi \theta }{p}=\frac{\partial \ \Pi }{ | 
| 1081 |  |  | \partial p}\theta \;\;;\;\;\frac{D\Pi }{Dt}=\frac{\partial \Pi }{\partial p} | 
| 1082 |  |  | \frac{Dp}{Dt} | 
| 1083 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1084 |  |  | where $b=\frac{\partial \ \Pi }{\partial p}\theta $ is the buoyancy. | 
| 1085 |  |  |  | 
| 1086 |  |  | The heat equation is obtained by noting that | 
| 1087 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1088 |  |  | c_{p}\frac{DT}{Dt}=\frac{D(\Pi \theta )}{Dt}=\Pi \frac{D\theta }{Dt}+\theta | 
| 1089 |  |  | \frac{D\Pi }{Dt}=\Pi \frac{D\theta }{Dt}+\alpha \frac{Dp}{Dt} | 
| 1090 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1091 |  |  | and on substituting into (\ref{eq-p-heat-interim}) gives: | 
| 1092 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1093 |  |  | \Pi \frac{D\theta }{Dt}=\mathcal{Q} | 
| 1094 |  |  | \label{eq:potential-temperature-equation} | 
| 1095 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1096 |  |  | which is in conservative form. | 
| 1097 |  |  |  | 
| 1098 |  |  | For convenience in the model we prefer to step forward (\ref | 
| 1099 |  |  | {eq:potential-temperature-equation}) rather than (\ref{eq:atmos-heat}). | 
| 1100 |  |  |  | 
| 1101 |  |  | \subsubsection{Boundary conditions} | 
| 1102 |  |  |  | 
| 1103 |  |  | The upper and lower boundary conditions are : | 
| 1104 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1105 |  |  | \mbox{at the top:}\;\;p=0 &&\text{, }\omega =\frac{Dp}{Dt}=0 \\ | 
| 1106 |  |  | \mbox{at the surface:}\;\;p=p_{s} &&\text{, }\phi =\phi _{topo}=g~Z_{topo} | 
| 1107 |  |  | \label{eq:boundary-condition-atmosphere} | 
| 1108 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1109 |  |  | In $p$-coordinates, the upper boundary acts like a solid boundary ($\omega | 
| 1110 |  |  | =0 $); in $z$-coordinates and the lower boundary is analogous to a free | 
| 1111 |  |  | surface ($\phi $ is imposed and $\omega \neq 0$). | 
| 1112 |  |  |  | 
| 1113 |  |  | \subsubsection{Splitting the geo-potential} | 
| 1114 |  |  |  | 
| 1115 |  |  | For the purposes of initialization and reducing round-off errors, the model | 
| 1116 |  |  | deals with perturbations from reference (or ``standard'') profiles. For | 
| 1117 |  |  | example, the hydrostatic geopotential associated with the resting atmosphere | 
| 1118 |  |  | is not dynamically relevant and can therefore be subtracted from the | 
| 1119 |  |  | equations. The equations written in terms of perturbations are obtained by | 
| 1120 |  |  | substituting the following definitions into the previous model equations: | 
| 1121 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1122 |  |  | \theta &=&\theta _{o}+\theta ^{\prime }  \label{eq:atmos-ref-prof-theta} \\ | 
| 1123 |  |  | \alpha &=&\alpha _{o}+\alpha ^{\prime }  \label{eq:atmos-ref-prof-alpha} \\ | 
| 1124 |  |  | \phi &=&\phi _{o}+\phi ^{\prime }  \label{eq:atmos-ref-prof-phi} | 
| 1125 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1126 |  |  | The reference state (indicated by subscript ``0'') corresponds to | 
| 1127 |  |  | horizontally homogeneous atmosphere at rest ($\theta _{o},\alpha _{o},\phi | 
| 1128 |  |  | _{o}$) with surface pressure $p_{o}(x,y)$ that satisfies $\phi | 
| 1129 |  |  | _{o}(p_{o})=g~Z_{topo}$, defined: | 
| 1130 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray*} | 
| 1131 |  |  | \theta _{o}(p) &=&f^{n}(p) \\ | 
| 1132 |  |  | \alpha _{o}(p) &=&\Pi _{p}\theta _{o} \\ | 
| 1133 |  |  | \phi _{o}(p) &=&\phi _{topo}-\int_{p_{0}}^{p}\alpha _{o}dp | 
| 1134 |  |  | \end{eqnarray*} | 
| 1135 |  |  | %\begin{eqnarray*} | 
| 1136 |  |  | %\phi'_\alpha & = & \int^p_{p_o} (\alpha_o -\alpha) dp \\ | 
| 1137 |  |  | %\phi'_s(x,y,t) & = & \int_{p_o}^{p_s} \alpha dp | 
| 1138 |  |  | %\end{eqnarray*} | 
| 1139 |  |  |  | 
| 1140 |  |  | The final form of the HPE's in p coordinates is then: | 
| 1141 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1142 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}}{Dt}+f\hat{\mathbf{k}}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1143 |  |  | _{h}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{p}\phi ^{\prime } &=&\vec{\mathbf{\mathcal{F}}} \\ | 
| 1144 |  |  | \frac{\partial \phi ^{\prime }}{\partial p}+\alpha ^{\prime } &=&0 \\ | 
| 1145 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{p}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{\partial \omega }{ | 
| 1146 |  |  | \partial p} &=&0 \\ | 
| 1147 |  |  | \frac{\partial \Pi }{\partial p}\theta ^{\prime } &=&\alpha ^{\prime } \\ | 
| 1148 |  |  | \frac{D\theta }{Dt} &=&\frac{\mathcal{Q}}{\Pi }  \label{eq:atmos-prime} | 
| 1149 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1150 |  |  |  | 
| 1151 | adcroft | 1.2 | % $Header: /u/gcmpack/mitgcmdoc/part1/manual.src,v 1.1 2001/10/11 19:36:56 adcroft Exp $ | 
| 1152 | adcroft | 1.1 | % $Name:  $ | 
| 1153 |  |  |  | 
| 1154 |  |  | \section{Appendix OCEAN} | 
| 1155 |  |  |  | 
| 1156 |  |  | \subsection{Equations of motion for the ocean} | 
| 1157 |  |  |  | 
| 1158 |  |  | We review here the method by which the standard (Boussinesq, incompressible) | 
| 1159 |  |  | HPE's for the ocean written in z-coordinates are obtained. The | 
| 1160 |  |  | non-Boussinesq equations for oceanic motion are: | 
| 1161 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1162 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}}{Dt}+f\hat{\mathbf{k}}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1163 |  |  | _{h}+\frac{1}{\rho }\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}p &=&\vec{\mathbf{\mathcal{F}}} \\ | 
| 1164 |  |  | \epsilon _{nh}\frac{Dw}{Dt}+g+\frac{1}{\rho }\frac{\partial p}{\partial z} | 
| 1165 |  |  | &=&\epsilon _{nh}\mathcal{F}_{w} \\ | 
| 1166 |  |  | \frac{1}{\rho }\frac{D\rho }{Dt}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1167 |  |  | _{h}+\frac{\partial w}{\partial z} &=&0 \\ | 
| 1168 |  |  | \rho &=&\rho (\theta ,S,p) \\ | 
| 1169 |  |  | \frac{D\theta }{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{\theta } \\ | 
| 1170 |  |  | \frac{DS}{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{s}  \label{eq:non-boussinesq} | 
| 1171 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1172 |  |  | These equations permit acoustics modes, inertia-gravity waves, | 
| 1173 |  |  | non-hydrostatic motions, a geostrophic (Rossby) mode and a thermo-haline | 
| 1174 |  |  | mode. As written, they cannot be integrated forward consistently - if we | 
| 1175 |  |  | step $\rho $ forward in (\ref{eq-zns-cont}), the answer will not be | 
| 1176 |  |  | consistent with that obtained by stepping (\ref{eq-zns-heat}) and (\ref | 
| 1177 |  |  | {eq-zns-salt}) and then using (\ref{eq-zns-eos}) to yield $\rho $. It is | 
| 1178 |  |  | therefore necessary to manipulate the system as follows. Differentiating the | 
| 1179 |  |  | EOS (equation of state) gives: | 
| 1180 |  |  |  | 
| 1181 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1182 |  |  | \frac{D\rho }{Dt}=\left. \frac{\partial \rho }{\partial \theta }\right| | 
| 1183 |  |  | _{S,p}\frac{D\theta }{Dt}+\left. \frac{\partial \rho }{\partial S}\right| | 
| 1184 |  |  | _{\theta ,p}\frac{DS}{Dt}+\left. \frac{\partial \rho }{\partial p}\right| | 
| 1185 |  |  | _{\theta ,S}\frac{Dp}{Dt}  \label{EOSexpansion} | 
| 1186 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1187 |  |  |  | 
| 1188 |  |  | Note that $\frac{\partial \rho }{\partial p}=\frac{1}{c_{s}^{2}}$ is the | 
| 1189 |  |  | reciprocal of the sound speed ($c_{s}$) squared. Substituting into \ref | 
| 1190 |  |  | {eq-zns-cont} gives: | 
| 1191 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1192 |  |  | \frac{1}{\rho c_{s}^{2}}\frac{Dp}{Dt}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{ | 
| 1193 |  |  | v}}+\partial _{z}w\approx 0  \label{eq-zns-pressure} | 
| 1194 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1195 |  |  | where we have used an approximation sign to indicate that we have assumed | 
| 1196 |  |  | adiabatic motion, dropping the $\frac{D\theta }{Dt}$ and $\frac{DS}{Dt}$. | 
| 1197 |  |  | Replacing \ref{eq-zns-cont} with \ref{eq-zns-pressure} yields a system that | 
| 1198 |  |  | can be explicitly integrated forward: | 
| 1199 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1200 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}}{Dt}+f\hat{\mathbf{k}}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1201 |  |  | _{h}+\frac{1}{\rho }\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}p &=&\vec{\mathbf{\mathcal{F}}} | 
| 1202 |  |  | \label{eq-cns-hmom} \\ | 
| 1203 |  |  | \epsilon _{nh}\frac{Dw}{Dt}+g+\frac{1}{\rho }\frac{\partial p}{\partial z} | 
| 1204 |  |  | &=&\epsilon _{nh}\mathcal{F}_{w}  \label{eq-cns-hydro} \\ | 
| 1205 |  |  | \frac{1}{\rho c_{s}^{2}}\frac{Dp}{Dt}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{ | 
| 1206 |  |  | v}}_{h}+\frac{\partial w}{\partial z} &=&0  \label{eq-cns-cont} \\ | 
| 1207 |  |  | \rho &=&\rho (\theta ,S,p)  \label{eq-cns-eos} \\ | 
| 1208 |  |  | \frac{D\theta }{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{\theta }  \label{eq-cns-heat} \\ | 
| 1209 |  |  | \frac{DS}{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{s}  \label{eq-cns-salt} | 
| 1210 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1211 |  |  |  | 
| 1212 |  |  | \subsubsection{Compressible z-coordinate equations} | 
| 1213 |  |  |  | 
| 1214 |  |  | Here we linearize the acoustic modes by replacing $\rho $ with $\rho _{o}(z)$ | 
| 1215 |  |  | wherever it appears in a product (ie. non-linear term) - this is the | 
| 1216 |  |  | `Boussinesq assumption'. The only term that then retains the full variation | 
| 1217 |  |  | in $\rho $ is the gravitational acceleration: | 
| 1218 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1219 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}}{Dt}+f\hat{\mathbf{k}}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1220 |  |  | _{h}+\frac{1}{\rho _{o}}\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}p &=&\vec{\mathbf{\mathcal{F}}} | 
| 1221 |  |  | \label{eq-zcb-hmom} \\ | 
| 1222 |  |  | \epsilon _{nh}\frac{Dw}{Dt}+\frac{g\rho }{\rho _{o}}+\frac{1}{\rho _{o}} | 
| 1223 |  |  | \frac{\partial p}{\partial z} &=&\epsilon _{nh}\mathcal{F}_{w} | 
| 1224 |  |  | \label{eq-zcb-hydro} \\ | 
| 1225 |  |  | \frac{1}{\rho _{o}c_{s}^{2}}\frac{Dp}{Dt}+\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{ | 
| 1226 |  |  | \mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{\partial w}{\partial z} &=&0  \label{eq-zcb-cont} \\ | 
| 1227 |  |  | \rho &=&\rho (\theta ,S,p)  \label{eq-zcb-eos} \\ | 
| 1228 |  |  | \frac{D\theta }{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{\theta }  \label{eq-zcb-heat} \\ | 
| 1229 |  |  | \frac{DS}{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{s}  \label{eq-zcb-salt} | 
| 1230 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1231 |  |  | These equations still retain acoustic modes. But, because the | 
| 1232 |  |  | ``compressible'' terms are linearized, the pressure equation \ref | 
| 1233 |  |  | {eq-zcb-cont} can be integrated implicitly with ease (the time-dependent | 
| 1234 |  |  | term appears as a Helmholtz term in the non-hydrostatic pressure equation). | 
| 1235 |  |  | These are the \emph{truly} compressible Boussinesq equations. Note that the | 
| 1236 |  |  | EOS must have the same pressure dependency as the linearized pressure term, | 
| 1237 |  |  | ie. $\left. \frac{\partial \rho }{\partial p}\right| _{\theta ,S}=\frac{1}{ | 
| 1238 |  |  | c_{s}^{2}}$, for consistency. | 
| 1239 |  |  |  | 
| 1240 |  |  | \subsubsection{`Anelastic' z-coordinate equations} | 
| 1241 |  |  |  | 
| 1242 |  |  | The anelastic approximation filters the acoustic mode by removing the | 
| 1243 |  |  | time-dependency in the continuity (now pressure-) equation (\ref{eq-zcb-cont} | 
| 1244 |  |  | ). This could be done simply by noting that $\frac{Dp}{Dt}\approx -g\rho _{o} | 
| 1245 |  |  | \frac{Dz}{Dt}=-g\rho _{o}w$, but this leads to an inconsistency between | 
| 1246 |  |  | continuity and EOS. A better solution is to change the dependency on | 
| 1247 |  |  | pressure in the EOS by splitting the pressure into a reference function of | 
| 1248 |  |  | height and a perturbation: | 
| 1249 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1250 |  |  | \rho =\rho (\theta ,S,p_{o}(z)+\epsilon _{s}p^{\prime }) | 
| 1251 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1252 |  |  | Remembering that the term $\frac{Dp}{Dt}$ in continuity comes from | 
| 1253 |  |  | differentiating the EOS, the continuity equation then becomes: | 
| 1254 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1255 |  |  | \frac{1}{\rho _{o}c_{s}^{2}}\left( \frac{Dp_{o}}{Dt}+\epsilon _{s}\frac{ | 
| 1256 |  |  | Dp^{\prime }}{Dt}\right) +\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+ | 
| 1257 |  |  | \frac{\partial w}{\partial z}=0 | 
| 1258 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1259 |  |  | If the time- and space-scales of the motions of interest are longer than | 
| 1260 |  |  | those of acoustic modes, then $\frac{Dp^{\prime }}{Dt}<<(\frac{Dp_{o}}{Dt}, | 
| 1261 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h})$ in the continuity equations and | 
| 1262 |  |  | $\left. \frac{\partial \rho }{\partial p}\right| _{\theta ,S}\frac{ | 
| 1263 |  |  | Dp^{\prime }}{Dt}<<\left. \frac{\partial \rho }{\partial p}\right| _{\theta | 
| 1264 |  |  | ,S}\frac{Dp_{o}}{Dt}$ in the EOS (\ref{EOSexpansion}). Thus we set $\epsilon | 
| 1265 |  |  | _{s}=0$, removing the dependency on $p^{\prime }$ in the continuity equation | 
| 1266 |  |  | and EOS. Expanding $\frac{Dp_{o}(z)}{Dt}=-g\rho _{o}w$ then leads to the | 
| 1267 |  |  | anelastic continuity equation: | 
| 1268 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1269 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{\partial w}{\partial z}- | 
| 1270 |  |  | \frac{g}{c_{s}^{2}}w=0  \label{eq-za-cont1} | 
| 1271 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1272 |  |  | A slightly different route leads to the quasi-Boussinesq continuity equation | 
| 1273 |  |  | where we use the scaling $\frac{\partial \rho ^{\prime }}{\partial t}+ | 
| 1274 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{3}\cdot \rho ^{\prime }\vec{\mathbf{v}}<<\mathbf{\nabla } | 
| 1275 |  |  | _{3}\cdot \rho _{o}\vec{\mathbf{v}}$ yielding: | 
| 1276 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1277 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{1}{\rho _{o}}\frac{ | 
| 1278 |  |  | \partial \left( \rho _{o}w\right) }{\partial z}=0  \label{eq-za-cont2} | 
| 1279 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1280 |  |  | Equations \ref{eq-za-cont1} and \ref{eq-za-cont2} are in fact the same | 
| 1281 |  |  | equation if: | 
| 1282 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1283 |  |  | \frac{1}{\rho _{o}}\frac{\partial \rho _{o}}{\partial z}=\frac{-g}{c_{s}^{2}} | 
| 1284 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1285 |  |  | Again, note that if $\rho _{o}$ is evaluated from prescribed $\theta _{o}$ | 
| 1286 |  |  | and $S_{o}$ profiles, then the EOS dependency on $p_{o}$ and the term $\frac{ | 
| 1287 |  |  | g}{c_{s}^{2}}$ in continuity should be referred to those same profiles. The | 
| 1288 |  |  | full set of `quasi-Boussinesq' or `anelastic' equations for the ocean are | 
| 1289 |  |  | then: | 
| 1290 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1291 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}}{Dt}+f\hat{\mathbf{k}}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1292 |  |  | _{h}+\frac{1}{\rho _{o}}\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}p &=&\vec{\mathbf{\mathcal{F}}} | 
| 1293 |  |  | \label{eq-zab-hmom} \\ | 
| 1294 |  |  | \epsilon _{nh}\frac{Dw}{Dt}+\frac{g\rho }{\rho _{o}}+\frac{1}{\rho _{o}} | 
| 1295 |  |  | \frac{\partial p}{\partial z} &=&\epsilon _{nh}\mathcal{F}_{w} | 
| 1296 |  |  | \label{eq-zab-hydro} \\ | 
| 1297 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{1}{\rho _{o}}\frac{ | 
| 1298 |  |  | \partial \left( \rho _{o}w\right) }{\partial z} &=&0  \label{eq-zab-cont} \\ | 
| 1299 |  |  | \rho &=&\rho (\theta ,S,p_{o}(z))  \label{eq-zab-eos} \\ | 
| 1300 |  |  | \frac{D\theta }{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{\theta }  \label{eq-zab-heat} \\ | 
| 1301 |  |  | \frac{DS}{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{s}  \label{eq-zab-salt} | 
| 1302 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1303 |  |  |  | 
| 1304 |  |  | \subsubsection{Incompressible z-coordinate equations} | 
| 1305 |  |  |  | 
| 1306 |  |  | Here, the objective is to drop the depth dependence of $\rho _{o}$ and so, | 
| 1307 |  |  | technically, to also remove the dependence of $\rho $ on $p_{o}$. This would | 
| 1308 |  |  | yield the ``truly'' incompressible Boussinesq equations: | 
| 1309 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1310 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}}{Dt}+f\hat{\mathbf{k}}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1311 |  |  | _{h}+\frac{1}{\rho _{c}}\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}p &=&\vec{\mathbf{\mathcal{F}}} | 
| 1312 |  |  | \label{eq-ztb-hmom} \\ | 
| 1313 |  |  | \epsilon _{nh}\frac{Dw}{Dt}+\frac{g\rho }{\rho _{c}}+\frac{1}{\rho _{c}} | 
| 1314 |  |  | \frac{\partial p}{\partial z} &=&\epsilon _{nh}\mathcal{F}_{w} | 
| 1315 |  |  | \label{eq-ztb-hydro} \\ | 
| 1316 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{\partial w}{\partial z} | 
| 1317 |  |  | &=&0  \label{eq-ztb-cont} \\ | 
| 1318 |  |  | \rho &=&\rho (\theta ,S)  \label{eq-ztb-eos} \\ | 
| 1319 |  |  | \frac{D\theta }{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{\theta }  \label{eq-ztb-heat} \\ | 
| 1320 |  |  | \frac{DS}{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{s}  \label{eq-ztb-salt} | 
| 1321 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1322 |  |  | where $\rho _{c}$ is a constant reference density of water. | 
| 1323 |  |  |  | 
| 1324 |  |  | \subsubsection{Compressible non-divergent equations} | 
| 1325 |  |  |  | 
| 1326 |  |  | The above ``incompressible'' equations are incompressible in both the flow | 
| 1327 |  |  | and the density. In many oceanic applications, however, it is important to | 
| 1328 |  |  | retain compressibility effects in the density. To do this we must split the | 
| 1329 |  |  | density thus: | 
| 1330 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1331 |  |  | \rho =\rho _{o}+\rho ^{\prime } | 
| 1332 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1333 |  |  | We then assert that variations with depth of $\rho _{o}$ are unimportant | 
| 1334 |  |  | while the compressible effects in $\rho ^{\prime }$ are: | 
| 1335 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1336 |  |  | \rho _{o}=\rho _{c} | 
| 1337 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1338 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1339 |  |  | \rho ^{\prime }=\rho (\theta ,S,p_{o}(z))-\rho _{o} | 
| 1340 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1341 |  |  | This then yields what we can call the semi-compressible Boussinesq | 
| 1342 |  |  | equations: | 
| 1343 |  |  | \begin{eqnarray} | 
| 1344 |  |  | \frac{D\vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}}{Dt}+f\hat{\mathbf{k}}\times \vec{\mathbf{v}} | 
| 1345 |  |  | _{h}+\frac{1}{\rho _{c}}\mathbf{\nabla }_{z}p^{\prime } &=&\vec{\mathbf{ | 
| 1346 |  |  | \mathcal{F}}}  \label{eq:ocean-mom} \\ | 
| 1347 |  |  | \epsilon _{nh}\frac{Dw}{Dt}+\frac{g\rho ^{\prime }}{\rho _{c}}+\frac{1}{\rho | 
| 1348 |  |  | _{c}}\frac{\partial p^{\prime }}{\partial z} &=&\epsilon _{nh}\mathcal{F}_{w} | 
| 1349 |  |  | \label{eq:ocean-wmom} \\ | 
| 1350 |  |  | \mathbf{\nabla }_{z}\cdot \vec{\mathbf{v}}_{h}+\frac{\partial w}{\partial z} | 
| 1351 |  |  | &=&0  \label{eq:ocean-cont} \\ | 
| 1352 |  |  | \rho ^{\prime } &=&\rho (\theta ,S,p_{o}(z))-\rho _{c}  \label{eq:ocean-eos} | 
| 1353 |  |  | \\ | 
| 1354 |  |  | \frac{D\theta }{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{\theta }  \label{eq:ocean-theta} \\ | 
| 1355 |  |  | \frac{DS}{Dt} &=&\mathcal{Q}_{s}  \label{eq:ocean-salt} | 
| 1356 |  |  | \end{eqnarray} | 
| 1357 |  |  | Note that the hydrostatic pressure of the resting fluid, including that | 
| 1358 |  |  | associated with $\rho _{c}$, is subtracted out since it has no effect on the | 
| 1359 |  |  | dynamics. | 
| 1360 |  |  |  | 
| 1361 |  |  | Though necessary, the assumptions that go into these equations are messy | 
| 1362 |  |  | since we essentially assume a different EOS for the reference density and | 
| 1363 |  |  | the perturbation density. Nevertheless, it is the hydrostatic ($\epsilon | 
| 1364 |  |  | _{nh}=0$ form of these equations that are used throughout the ocean modeling | 
| 1365 |  |  | community and referred to as the primitive equations (HPE). | 
| 1366 |  |  |  | 
| 1367 | adcroft | 1.2 | % $Header: /u/gcmpack/mitgcmdoc/part1/manual.src,v 1.1 2001/10/11 19:36:56 adcroft Exp $ | 
| 1368 | adcroft | 1.1 | % $Name:  $ | 
| 1369 |  |  |  | 
| 1370 |  |  | \section{Appendix:OPERATORS} | 
| 1371 |  |  |  | 
| 1372 |  |  | \subsection{Coordinate systems} | 
| 1373 |  |  |  | 
| 1374 |  |  | \subsubsection{Spherical coordinates} | 
| 1375 |  |  |  | 
| 1376 |  |  | In spherical coordinates, the velocity components in the zonal, meridional | 
| 1377 |  |  | and vertical direction respectively, are given by (see Fig.2) : | 
| 1378 |  |  |  | 
| 1379 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1380 |  |  | u=r\cos \phi \frac{D\lambda }{Dt} | 
| 1381 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1382 |  |  |  | 
| 1383 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1384 |  |  | v=r\frac{D\phi }{Dt}\qquad | 
| 1385 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1386 |  |  | $\qquad \qquad \qquad \qquad $ | 
| 1387 |  |  |  | 
| 1388 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1389 |  |  | \dot{r}=\frac{Dr}{Dt} | 
| 1390 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1391 |  |  |  | 
| 1392 |  |  | Here $\phi $ is the latitude, $\lambda $ the longitude, $r$ the radial | 
| 1393 |  |  | distance of the particle from the center of the earth, $\Omega $ is the | 
| 1394 |  |  | angular speed of rotation of the Earth and $D/Dt$ is the total derivative. | 
| 1395 |  |  |  | 
| 1396 |  |  | The `grad' ($\nabla $) and `div' ($\nabla $.) operators are defined by, in | 
| 1397 |  |  | spherical coordinates: | 
| 1398 |  |  |  | 
| 1399 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1400 |  |  | \nabla \equiv \left( \frac{1}{r\cos \phi }\frac{\partial }{\partial \lambda } | 
| 1401 |  |  | ,\frac{1}{r}\frac{\partial }{\partial \phi },\frac{\partial }{\partial r} | 
| 1402 |  |  | \right) | 
| 1403 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1404 |  |  |  | 
| 1405 |  |  | \begin{equation*} | 
| 1406 |  |  | \nabla .v\equiv \frac{1}{r\cos \phi }\left\{ \frac{\partial u}{\partial | 
| 1407 |  |  | \lambda }+\frac{\partial }{\partial \phi }\left( v\cos \phi \right) \right\} | 
| 1408 |  |  | +\frac{1}{r^{2}}\frac{\partial \left( r^{2}\dot{r}\right) }{\partial r} | 
| 1409 |  |  | \end{equation*} | 
| 1410 |  |  |  | 
| 1411 |  |  | %tci%\end{document} |