- Created by Sarah Keeley, last modified on Jul 29, 2016
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Time | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday |
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9.15 | Introductions | The goal of this session is to provide an overview of the use of generalised curvilinear coordinates in atmospheric numerical models. By the end of the session you should be able to:
Christian Kühnlein | During this presentation, we will discuss two of the questions faced by numerical weather prediction scientists as forecast models reach horizontal resolutions of 6 to 2 km:
By the end of the presentation, you should be able to:
Sylvie Malardel
| The aim of this lecture is to systematically build theoretical foundations for Numerical Weather Prediction at nonhydrostatic resolutions. In the first part of the lecture, we will discuss a suite of all-scale nonhydrostatic PDEs, including the anelastic, the pseudo-incompressible and the fully compressible Euler equations of atmospheric dynamics. First we will introduce the three sets of nonhydrostatic governing equations written in a physically intuitive Cartesian vector form, in abstraction from the model geometry and the coordinate frame adopted. Then, we will combine the three sets into a single set recast in a form of the conservation laws consistent with the problem geometry and the unified solution procedure. In the second part of the lecture, we will build and document the common numerical algorithm for integrating the generalised set of the governing PDEs put forward in the first part of the lecture. Then, we will compare soundproof and compressible solutions and demonstrate the efficacy of this unified numerical framework for two idealised flow problems relevant to weather and climate. By the end of the lecture you should be able to:
Piotr Smolarkiewicz Course2016_smolar.pdf | The aim of this session is to learn about recent developments in discontinuous higher order spatial discretization methods, such as the Discontinuous Galerkin method (DG), and the Spectral Difference method (SD). These methods are of interest because they can be used on unstructured meshes and facilitate optimal parallel efficiency. We will present an overview of higher order grid point methods for discretizing partial differential equations (PDE's) with compact stencil support, and illustrate a practical implementation. By the end of the session you should be able to:
Willem Deconinck |
10.35 | Using the 30-year history of ECMWF's Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) as an example, thelecture is an introduction to the development and current state-of-the-art of global numerical weather prediction (NWP), as well as to the challenges faced in the future. It is intended to provide an overview and context for the topics covered in more detail during the course. By the end of the session you should be able to:
Nils Wedi | The goal of this session is to provide an overview of the use of generalised curvilinear coordinates in atmospheric numerical models. By the end of the session you should be able to:
Christian Kühnlein | Practical Session Willem Deconinck, Christian Kühnlein | The aim of this lecture is to systematically build theoretical foundations for Numerical Weather Prediction at nonhydrostatic resolutions. In the first part of the lecture, we will discuss a suite of all-scale nonhydrostatic PDEs, including the anelastic, the pseudo-incompressible and the fully compressible Euler equations of atmospheric dynamics. First we will introduce the three sets of nonhydrostatic governing equations written in a physically intuitive Cartesian vector form, in abstraction from the model geometry and the coordinate frame adopted. Then, we will combine the three sets into a single set recast in a form of the conservation laws consistent with the problem geometry and the unified solution procedure. In the second part of the lecture, we will build and document the common numerical algorithm for integrating the generalised set of the governing PDEs put forward in the first part of the lecture. Then, we will compare soundproof and compressible solutions and demonstrate the efficacy of this unified numerical framework for two idealised flow problems relevant to weather and climate. By the end of the lecture you should be able to:
Piotr Smolarkiewicz | The aim of this session is to learn about recent developments in discontinuous higher order spatial discretization methods, such as the Discontinuous Galerkin method (DG), and the Spectral Difference method (SD). These methods are of interest because they can be used on unstructured meshes and facilitate optimal parallel efficiency. We will present an overview of higher order grid point methods for discretizing partial differential equations (PDE's) with compact stencil support, and illustrate a practical implementation. By the end of the session you should be able to:
Willem Deconinck |
11.45 |
The success of the spectral transform method in global NWP in comparison to alternative methods has been overwhelming, with many operational forecast centres (including ECMWF) having madethe spectral transform their method of choice. The lecture will introduce the basic elements of the spectral transform, explain why it has been successful and describe recent developments such as the fast Legendre transform. By the end of the session you should be able to:
Nils Wedi Lecture_2_wedi.pptx |
Recently, there is in increasing interest in trying to understand the properties of coupled atmosphere, ocean-wave, ocean/sea-ice models with an ultimate goal to start predicting weather, waves and ocean circulation on time scales ranging from the medium-range to seasonal timescale. Such a coupled system not only requires the development of an efficient coupled forecasting system but also the development of a data assimilation component. During the two lectures I will briefly describe the components of the coupled system. It will be made plausible that ocean waves are an essential element of such a coupled system as through the wave action, momentum and heat are transferred from atmosphere to ocean. Also, the sea state determines to a considerable extent the efficiency with which momentum is transferred from atmosphere to waves, while ocean waves also play a decisive role in the evolution of the sea-ice edge. Results showing the importance of ocean waves on upper-ocean mixing and on atmospheric circulation are discussed as well, while I will finish the lectures by presenting preliminary results from coupled data assimilation experiments. By the end of this session, the student will be able to:
Jean Bidlot Advance_numerical_method_for_earth_modelling_Jean_Bidlot.pptx |
Practical Session Willem Deconinck, Christian Kühnlein | The aim of this session is to understand the main issues and challenges in parallel computing, and how parallel computers are programmed today. By the end of this session you should be able to
George Mozdzynski | Course wrap up and Certificates |
14.00 | The aim of this session is to describe the numerical technique used in the ECMWF model for integrating the transport equations of the hydrostatic primitive equation set. We will present an overview of the semi-Lagrangian method and how it is combined with semi-implicit time-stepping to provide a stable and accurate formulation for the ECMWF Integrated Forecasting System (IFS). By the end of this session you should be able to:
Michail Diamantakis | Recently, there is in increasing interest in trying to understand the properties of coupled atmosphere, ocean-wave, ocean/sea-ice models with an ultimate goal to start predicting weather, waves and ocean circulation on time scales ranging from the medium-range to seasonal timescale. Such a coupled system not only requires the development of an efficient coupled forecasting system but also the development of a data assimilation component. During the two lectures I will briefly describe the components of the coupled system. It will be made plausible that ocean waves are an essential element of such a coupled system as through the wave action, momentum and heat are transferred from atmosphere to ocean. Also, the sea state determines to a considerable extent the efficiency with which momentum is transferred from atmosphere to waves, while ocean waves also play a decisive role in the evolution of the sea-ice edge. Results showing the importance of ocean waves on upper-ocean mixing and on atmospheric circulation are discussed as well, while I will finish the lectures by presenting preliminary results from coupled data assimilation experiments. By the end of this session, the student will be able to:
Jean Bidlot | The aim of two lectures is to introduce basis of finite volume and continuous finite element discretisations and relate them to corresponding data structures and mesh generation techniques. The main focus will be on unstructured meshes and their application to global and local atmospheric models. Flexibility, communication overheads, memory requirements and user friendliness of such meshes with be contrasted with those of structured meshes. The most commonly used mesh generation techniques will be highlighted, together with mesh manipulation techniques employed in mesh adaption approaches and will be followed by a discussion of alternative geometrical representations of orography. An example of unstructured meshes’ implementation to non-hydrostatic and hydrostatic atmospheric solvers will provide an illustration of their potential and challenges. By the end of the lecture you should be able to:
Joanna Szmelter 2016.ppt2016.ppt | The aim of this session is to understand the main issues and challenges in parallel computing, and how parallel computers are programmed today. By the end of this session you should be able to
George Mozdzynski |
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15.30 | The aim of this session is to describe alternative (to the semi-Lagrangian) numerical techniques for integrating the transport equation sets encountered in NWP models. We will present an overview of different Eulerian time-stepping techniques and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each approach. By the end of the session you should be able to:
Michail Diamantakis |
During this presentation, we will discuss two of the questions faced by numerical weather prediction scientists as forecast models reach horizontal resolutions of 6 to 2 km:
By the end of the presentation, you should be able to:
resolution.pdf Sylvie Malardel | The aim of two lectures is to introduce basis of finite volume and continuous finite element discretisations and relate them to corresponding data structures and mesh generation techniques. The main focus will be on unstructured meshes and their application to global and local atmospheric models. Flexibility, communication overheads, memory requirements and user friendliness of such meshes with be contrasted with those of structured meshes. The most commonly used mesh generation techniques will be highlighted, together with mesh manipulation techniques employed in mesh adaption approaches and will be followed by a discussion of alternative geometrical representations of orography. An example of unstructured meshes’ implementation to non-hydrostatic and hydrostatic atmospheric solvers will provide an illustration of their potential and challenges. By the end of the lecture you should be able to:
Joanna Szmelter
| In this lecture we will give you a brief history of ECMWF and present the main areas of NWP research that is currently being carried out in the centre. We then look at current research challenges and present some of the latest developments that will soon become operational. By the end of the lecture you should be able to:
Sarah Keeley and Erland Källén ECMWF-Past-FutureNM_2016_EK.pptx
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