the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
DCMIP2016: a review of non-hydrostatic dynamical core design and intercomparison of participating models
Christiane Jablonowski
James Kent
Peter H. Lauritzen
Ramachandran Nair
Kevin A. Reed
Colin M. Zarzycki
David M. Hall
Don Dazlich
Ross Heikes
Celal Konor
David Randall
Thomas Dubos
Yann Meurdesoif
Lucas Harris
Christian Kühnlein
Vivian Lee
Abdessamad Qaddouri
Claude Girard
Marco Giorgetta
Daniel Reinert
Joseph Klemp
Sang-Hun Park
William Skamarock
Hiroaki Miura
Tomoki Ohno
Ryuji Yoshida
Robert Walko
Alex Reinecke
Kevin Viner
Abstract. Atmospheric dynamical cores are a fundamental component of global atmospheric modeling systems and are responsible for capturing the dynamical behavior of the Earth's atmosphere via numerical integration of the Navier–Stokes equations. These systems have existed in one form or another for over half of a century, with the earliest discretizations having now evolved into a complex ecosystem of algorithms and computational strategies. In essence, no two dynamical cores are alike, and their individual successes suggest that no perfect model exists. To better understand modern dynamical cores, this paper aims to provide a comprehensive review of 11 non-hydrostatic dynamical cores, drawn from modeling centers and groups that participated in the 2016 Dynamical Core Model Intercomparison Project (DCMIP) workshop and summer school. This review includes a choice of model grid, variable placement, vertical coordinate, prognostic equations, temporal discretization, and the diffusion, stabilization, filters, and fixers employed by each system.
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