1 |
\section {GCHEM Package} |
2 |
\label{sec:pkg:gchem} |
3 |
\begin{rawhtml} |
4 |
<!-- CMIREDIR:package_gchem: --> |
5 |
\end{rawhtml} |
6 |
|
7 |
\subsection {Introduction} |
8 |
This package has been developed as interface to the PTRACERS package. |
9 |
The purpose is to provide a structure where various (any) |
10 |
tracer experiments can be added to the code. |
11 |
For instance there are placeholders for routines |
12 |
to read in parameters needed for any tracer experiments, a routine |
13 |
to read in extra fields required for the tracer code, routines |
14 |
for either external forcing or internal interactions between tracers |
15 |
and routines for additional diagnostics relating to the tracers. |
16 |
Note that the gchem package itself is only a means to call |
17 |
the subroutines used by specific biogeochemical experiments, |
18 |
and does not "do" anything on its own. |
19 |
|
20 |
There are two examples: cfc which looks at 2 tracers with a |
21 |
simple external forcing and dic with 5 tracers whose tendency terms |
22 |
are related to one another. We will discuss these here only as |
23 |
how they provide examples to use this package. |
24 |
|
25 |
|
26 |
\subsection {Key subroutines and parameters} |
27 |
|
28 |
\noindent |
29 |
{{\bf FRAMEWORK}} \\ |
30 |
{\it GCHEM\_OPTIONS.h} includes the compiler options to be used |
31 |
in any experiment. For instance \#define ALLOW\_CFC allows |
32 |
the CFC code to be run. An important compiler option is |
33 |
\#define PTRACERS\_SEPARATE\_FORCING which determined |
34 |
how and when the tracer forcing is applied (see discussion |
35 |
on Forcing below). |
36 |
There are further runtime parameters |
37 |
set in {\it data.gchem} and kept in common block {\it GCHEM.h}. |
38 |
These runtime options include:\\ |
39 |
$\bullet$ {\bf tIter0} which is the integer timestep when the tracer experiment |
40 |
is initialized. If {\bf nIter0} $=$ {\bf tIter0} then the tracers |
41 |
are initialized to zero or from initial files. If {\bf nIter0} $>$ |
42 |
{\bf tIter0} then tracers (and previous timestep tendency terms) |
43 |
are read in from a the ptracers pickup file. Note that tracers |
44 |
of zeros will be carried around if {\bf nIter0} $<$ {\bf tIter0}. |
45 |
\\ |
46 |
$\bullet$ {\bf nsubtime} is the integer number of extra timesteps |
47 |
required by the tracer experiment. This will give a timestep |
48 |
of {\bf deltaTtracer}$/${\bf nsubtime} for the dependencies |
49 |
between tracers. The default is one. |
50 |
\\ |
51 |
$\bullet$ File names - these are several filenames than can be read in |
52 |
for external fields needed in the tracer forcing - for instance |
53 |
wind speed is needed in both DIC and CFC packages to calculate |
54 |
the air-sea exchange of gases. Not all file names will be used |
55 |
for every tracer experiment. |
56 |
|
57 |
\vspace{.5cm} |
58 |
|
59 |
\noindent |
60 |
{{\bf INITIALIZATION}}\\ |
61 |
The values set at runtime in data.gchem are read in |
62 |
using {\it gchem\_readparms.F} which is called from |
63 |
packages\_readparms.F. This will include any external |
64 |
forcing files that will be needed by the tracer experiment. |
65 |
|
66 |
There are two routine used to initialize parameters and fields |
67 |
needed by the experiment packages. These are |
68 |
{\it gchem\_init\_fixed.F} which is called from packages\_init\_fixed.F, and |
69 |
{\it gchem\_init\_vari.F} called from |
70 |
packages\_init\_variable.F. The first should |
71 |
be used to call a subroutine specific to the tracer experiment |
72 |
which sets fixed parameters, the second should call a subroutine |
73 |
specific to the tracer experiment |
74 |
which sets (or initializes) time fields that will vary with time. |
75 |
|
76 |
\vspace{.5cm} |
77 |
|
78 |
|
79 |
\noindent |
80 |
{{\bf LOADING FIELDS}}\\ |
81 |
External forcing fields used by the tracer experiment are read |
82 |
in by a subroutine (specific to the tracer experiment) called from |
83 |
{\it gchem\_fields\_load.F}. This latter is called from forward\_step.F. |
84 |
|
85 |
\vspace{.5cm} |
86 |
|
87 |
|
88 |
\noindent |
89 |
{{\bf FORCING}}\\ |
90 |
Tracer fields are advected-and-diffused by the ptracer package. |
91 |
Additional changes (e.g. surface forcing or interactions |
92 |
between tracers) to these fields are taken care of by the gchem |
93 |
interface. For tracers that are essentially passive (e.g. CFC's) |
94 |
but may have some surface boundary conditions |
95 |
this can easily be done within the regular tracer timestep. In this case |
96 |
{\it gchem\_forcing\_int.F} is called from ptracers\_integrate.F. |
97 |
For tracers with more complicated dependencies on each other, |
98 |
and especially tracers which require a smaller timestep than |
99 |
deltaTtracer, it will be easier to use {\it gchem\_forcing\_sep.F} |
100 |
which is called from forward\_step.F. There is a |
101 |
compiler option set in {\it GCHEM\_OPTIONS.h} that determines |
102 |
which method is used: \#define PTRACERS\_SEPARATE\_FORCING |
103 |
does the latter where tracers are forced separately from the |
104 |
advection-diffusion code, and \#undef PTRACERS\_SEPARATE\_FORCING |
105 |
includes the forcing in the regular timestepping. |
106 |
|
107 |
\vspace{.5cm} |
108 |
|
109 |
\noindent |
110 |
{{\bf DIAGNOSTICS}}\\ |
111 |
This package also includes routines {\it gchem\_monitor.F} and |
112 |
{\it gchem\_mon\_print.F} which print out tracer statistics |
113 |
as often as the model dynamic statistic diagnostics (dynsys) are written. |
114 |
There is also a placeholder for any tracer experiment |
115 |
specific diagnostics to be calculated and printed to files. |
116 |
This is done in {\it gchem\_diags.F}. For instance the time average CO2 |
117 |
air-sea fluxes, and sea surface pH (among others) are written |
118 |
out by dic\_biotic\_diags.F which is called from gchem\_diags.F. |
119 |
|
120 |
\subsection{Do's and Don'ts} |
121 |
|
122 |
The pkg ptracer is required with use with this pkg. |
123 |
By itself, gchem pkg will read in {\bf data.gchem} and will |
124 |
write out ptracer diagnostics. It requires tracer experiment |
125 |
specific calls to do anything else (for instance the calls |
126 |
to dic and cfc pkgs). |
127 |
|
128 |
\subsection{Reference Material} |
129 |
|