Abstract

Abstract Currently, most operational forecasting models use latitude–longitude grids, whose convergence of meridians toward the poles limits parallel scaling. Quasi-uniform grids might avoid this limitation. Thuburn et al. and Ringler et al. have developed a method for arbitrarily structured, orthogonal C grids called TRiSK, which has many of the desirable properties of the C grid on latitude–longitude grids but which works on a variety of quasi-uniform grids. Here, five quasi-uniform, orthogonal grids of the sphere are investigated using TRiSK to solve the shallow-water equations. Some of the advantages and disadvantages of the hexagonal and triangular icosahedra, a “Voronoi-ized” cubed sphere, a Voronoi-ized skipped latitude–longitude grid, and a grid of kites in comparison to a full latitude–longitude grid are demonstrated. It is shown that the hexagonal icosahedron gives the most accurate results (for least computational cost). All of the grids suffer from spurious computational modes; this is especially true of the kite grid, despite it having exactly twice as many velocity degrees of freedom as height degrees of freedom. However, the computational modes are easiest to control on the hexagonal icosahedron since they consist of vorticity oscillations on the dual grid that can be controlled using a diffusive advection scheme for potential vorticity.

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