The E3SM Nonhydrostatic Dynamical Core Formulation
A core component of E3SM’s new cloud resolving atmosphere model.
The Science
The Impact
This new dynamical core is being used in E3SM’s nonhydrostatic cloud-resolving modeling project. The project together with DOE’s upcoming Exascale supercomputers will allow scientists to resolve the convective processes responsible for storm systems, removing a large source of uncertainty in climate change projections.
Summary
This research provides an energy-consistent discretization of the nonhydrostatic equations for use in global models of the Earth’s atmosphere. The discretization was implemented in a new dynamical core for DOE’s Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM). The discretization is written in terms of standard variables in spherical coordinates and supports a wide variety of terrain-following vertical coordinates. It can be used with any horizontal discretization that has a discrete version of the integration-by-parts identity. The new discretization preserves the Hamiltonian structure of the original differential equations. It is coupled with mimetic numerical methods which leads to an energy consistent discretization. The discretization ensures no spurious sources of energy, resulting in improved stability and accuracy.
Publication
- Taylor, M, O Guba, A Steyer, P Ullrich, D Hall, and C Eldrid. 2020. “An Energy Consistent Discretization of the Nonhydrostatic Equations in Primitive Variables.” Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1029/2019ms001783.
Funding
- The U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research supported this research as part of the Earth System Modeling Program Area through the Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM) project.
Contact
- Mark Taylor, Sandia National Laboratories