Litcius/Paper detail

On the Importance of High-Resolution in Large-Scale Ocean Models

Eric P. Chassignet, Xiaobiao Xu

2021Advances in Atmospheric Sciences83 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Eddying global ocean models are now routinely used for ocean prediction, and the value-added of a better representation of the observed ocean variability and western boundary currents at that resolution is currently being evaluated in climate models. This overview article begins with a brief summary of the impact on ocean model biases of resolving eddies in several global ocean–sea ice numerical simulations. Then, a series of North and Equatorial Atlantic configurations are used to show that an increase of the horizontal resolution from eddy-resolving to submesoscale-enabled together with the inclusion of high-resolution bathymetry and tides significantly improve the models’ abilities to represent the observed ocean variability and western boundary currents. However, the computational cost of these simulations is extremely large, and for these simulations to become routine, close collaborations with computer scientists are essential to ensure that numerical codes can take full advantage of the latest computing architecture.

Topics & Concepts

BathymetryBoundary currentEddyClimatologyOcean currentOcean surface topographyGeologyOcean dynamicsMeteorologyClimate modelScale (ratio)Environmental scienceOceanographyClimate changeGeographyTurbulenceCartographyOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations