TY - JOUR
T1 - A cell-integrated semi-lagrangian semi-implicit shallow-water model (CSLAM-SW) with conservative and consistent transport
AU - Wong, May
AU - Skamarock, William C.
AU - Lauritzen, Peter H.
AU - Stull, Roland B.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - A Cartesian semi-implicit solver using the Conservative Semi-Lagrangian Multitracer (CSLAM) transport scheme is constructed and tested for shallow-water (SW) flows. The SW equations solver (CSLAM-SW) uses a discrete semi-implicit continuity equation specifically designed to ensure a conservative and consistent transport of constituents by avoiding the use of a constant mean reference state. The algorithm is constructed to be similar to typical conservative semi-Lagrangian semi-implicit schemes, requiring at each time step a single linear Helmholtz equation solution and a single application of CSLAM. The accuracy and stability of the solver is tested using four test cases for a radially propagating gravity wave and two barotropically unstable jets. In a consistency test using the new solver, the specific concentration constancy is preserved up to machine roundoff, whereas a typical formulation can have errors many orders of magnitude larger. In addition to mass conservation and consistency, CSLAM-SWalso ensures shape preservation by combining the new scheme with existing shape-preserving filters. With promising SW test results, CSLAM-SW shows potential for extension to a nonhydrostatic, fully compressible system solver for numerical weather prediction and climate models.
AB - A Cartesian semi-implicit solver using the Conservative Semi-Lagrangian Multitracer (CSLAM) transport scheme is constructed and tested for shallow-water (SW) flows. The SW equations solver (CSLAM-SW) uses a discrete semi-implicit continuity equation specifically designed to ensure a conservative and consistent transport of constituents by avoiding the use of a constant mean reference state. The algorithm is constructed to be similar to typical conservative semi-Lagrangian semi-implicit schemes, requiring at each time step a single linear Helmholtz equation solution and a single application of CSLAM. The accuracy and stability of the solver is tested using four test cases for a radially propagating gravity wave and two barotropically unstable jets. In a consistency test using the new solver, the specific concentration constancy is preserved up to machine roundoff, whereas a typical formulation can have errors many orders of magnitude larger. In addition to mass conservation and consistency, CSLAM-SWalso ensures shape preservation by combining the new scheme with existing shape-preserving filters. With promising SW test results, CSLAM-SW shows potential for extension to a nonhydrostatic, fully compressible system solver for numerical weather prediction and climate models.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84880756746
U2 - 10.1175/MWR-D-12-00275.1
DO - 10.1175/MWR-D-12-00275.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84880756746
SN - 0027-0644
VL - 141
SP - 2545
EP - 2560
JO - Monthly Weather Review
JF - Monthly Weather Review
IS - 7
ER -