Abstract

Abstract. Accurately representing coastal and shelf seas in global ocean models represents one of the grand challenges of Earth system science. They are regions of immense societal importance through the goods and services they provide, hazards they pose and their role in global-scale processes and cycles, e.g. carbon fluxes and dense water formation. However, they are poorly represented in the current generation of global ocean models. In this contribution, we aim to briefly characterise the problem, and then to identify the important physical processes, and their scales, needed to address this issue in the context of the options available to resolve these scales globally and the evolving computational landscape.We find barotropic and topographic scales are well resolved by the current state-of-the-art model resolutions, e.g. nominal 1∕12°, and still reasonably well resolved at 1∕4°; here, the focus is on process representation. We identify tides, vertical coordinates, river inflows and mixing schemes as four areas where modelling approaches can readily be transferred from regional to global modelling with substantial benefit. In terms of finer-scale processes, we find that a 1∕12° global model resolves the first baroclinic Rossby radius for only ∼ 8 % of regions < 500 m deep, but this increases to ∼ 70 % for a 1∕72° model, so resolving scales globally requires substantially finer resolution than the current state of the art.We quantify the benefit of improved resolution and process representation using 1∕12° global- and basin-scale northern North Atlantic nucleus for a European model of the ocean (NEMO) simulations; the latter includes tides and a k-ε vertical mixing scheme. These are compared with global stratification observations and 19 models from CMIP5. In terms of correlation and basin-wide rms error, the high-resolution models outperform all these CMIP5 models. The model with tides shows improved seasonal cycles compared to the high-resolution model without tides. The benefits of resolution are particularly apparent in eastern boundary upwelling zones.To explore the balance between the size of a globally refined model and that of multiscale modelling options (e.g. finite element, finite volume or a two-way nesting approach), we consider a simple scale analysis and a conceptual grid refining approach. We put this analysis in the context of evolving computer systems, discussing model turnaround time, scalability and resource costs. Using a simple cost model compared to a reference configuration (taken to be a 1∕4° global model in 2011) and the increasing performance of the UK Research Councils' computer facility, we estimate an unstructured mesh multiscale approach, resolving process scales down to 1.5 km, would use a comparable share of the computer resource by 2021, the two-way nested multiscale approach by 2022, and a 1∕72° global model by 2026. However, we also note that a 1∕12° global model would not have a comparable computational cost to a 1° global model in 2017 until 2027. Hence, we conclude that for computationally expensive models (e.g. for oceanographic research or operational oceanography), resolving scales to ∼ 1.5 km would be routinely practical in about a decade given substantial effort on numerical and computational development. For complex Earth system models, this extends to about 2 decades, suggesting the focus here needs to be on improved process parameterisation to meet these challenges.

Highlights

  • Improving the representation of coastal and shelf seas in global models is one of the grand challenges in ocean modelling and Earth system science

  • The process scales are themselves very much dependent on the scale of the information used to calculate them, so a highresolution model grid used in practice is a good starting point, the results presented below are not generally dependent on this grid choice

  • Here we focus on the potential energy anomaly (PEA) (Eq 2) as a measure of upper ocean stratification, and Fig. 4 shows that both these models perform substantially better than the CMIP5 models in both rms error (RMSE) and correlation across the whole domain

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Summary

Introduction

Improving the representation of coastal and shelf seas in global models is one of the grand challenges in ocean modelling and Earth system science. 2. Section 3 considers modelling approaches that might address coastal ocean process representation and resolution, drawing on the CMIP5 coupled ocean–atmosphere climate models (Taylor et al, 2012) and two 1/12◦ NEMO configurations in comparison with EN4 profile observations (Good et al, 2013) to provide quantitative examples. These considerations are related to changing computer architectures and issues of model performance, to estimate when they may be practical.

Background and motivation
Coastal ocean processes and scales
Coastal ocean process scales in a global context
The modelling approaches
Process representation
Vertical coordinates
Vertical and horizontal mixing parameterisations
Coastal boundary conditions and rivers
Resolving the pertinent scales
Options for multiscale modelling
Trends in high-performance computing
Scalability and efficiency of ocean models
Exploiting future HPC architectures
The comparative cost of ocean models
Conclusions
Findings
Code and data availability
Full Text
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