source: trunk/LMDZ.GENERIC/DOC/zoom.tex @ 2613

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1\chapter{Zoomed simulations}
2
3\label{sc:zoom}
4
5The LMD GCM can use a zoom to enhance the resolution locally.
6In practice, one can
7increase the latitudinal resolution on the one hand,
8and the longitudinal resolution on
9the other hand.
10
11\section{To define the zoomed area}
12
13The zoom is defined in {\tt run.def}.
14Here are the variables that you want to set:
15
16\begin{itemize}
17\item East longitude (in degrees) of zoom center {\tt clon}
18\item latitude (in degrees) of zoom center {\tt clat}
19\item zooming factors, along longitude {\tt grossismx}.
20      {\it Typically 1.5, 2 or even 3 (see below)}
21\item zooming factors, along latitude {\tt grossismy}. {\it Typically 1.5, 2
22or even 3 (see below)}
23\item {\tt fxyhypb}:
24      {\it {\bf must be set to "T" for a zoom}, whereas it must be F otherwise}
25\item extention in longitude  of zoomed area {\tt dzoomx}.
26      This is the total
27      longitudinal extension of the zoomed region (degree). \newline
28      {\it It is recommended that {\tt grossismx} $\times$
29      {\tt dzoomx} $< 200^o$}
30\item extention in latitude of the zoomed region {\tt dzoomy}.
31      This is the total
32      latitudinal extension of the zoomed region (degree). \newline
33      {\it It is recommended that {\tt
34      grossismy} $\times$ {\tt dzoomy} $< 100^o$}
35\item stiffness of the zoom along longitudes {\tt taux}.
36      2 is for a smooth transition in
37      longitude, more means sharper transition.
38\item stiffness of the zoom along latitudes {\tt taux}.
39      2 is for a smooth transition in
40      latitude, more means sharper transition.
41\end{itemize}
42
43\section{Making a zoomed initial state}
44
45One must start from an initial state archive {\tt start\_archive.nc}
46obtained from a previous
47simulation (see section~\ref{sc:newstart})
48Then compile and run {\tt newstart.e} {\bf using the {\tt run.def}
49file designed for the zoom}.
50
51After running {\tt newstart.e}. The zoomed grid may be visualized
52using grads, for instance.
53Here is a grads script that can be used to map the grid above a topography
54map:
55
56\begin{verbatim}
57set mpdraw off
58set grid off
59sdfopen restart.nc
60set gxout grid
61set digsiz 0
62set lon -180 180
63d ps
64close 1
65*** replace the path to surface.nc in the following line:
66sdfopen  /u/forget/WWW/datagcm/datafile/surface.nc
67set lon -180 180
68set gxout contour
69set clab off
70set cint 3
71d zMOL
72\end{verbatim}
73
74
75\section{Running a zoomed simulation and stability issue}
76
77\begin{itemize}
78
79\item {\bf dynamical timestep}
80Because of their higher resolution, zoomed simulation requires a higher
81timestep.
82Therefore in {\tt run.def}, the number of dynamical timestep per day
83{\tt day\_step} must be increased by more than {\tt grossismx} or
84{\tt grossismy} (twice that if necessary).
85However, you can keep the same physical timestep (48/sol) and thus increase
86 {\tt iphysiq} accordingly ({\tt iphysiq = day\_step/48}).
87
88\item It has been found that when zooming in longitude, on must set
89{\tt ngroup=1} in
90{\tt dyn3d/groupeun.F}. Otherwise the run is less stable.
91
92\item The very first initial state made with {\tt newstart.e} can be noisy and
93dynamically unstable.
94It may be necessary to strongly increase the intensity of the
95dissipation and increase {\tt day\_step} in {\tt run.def} for 1 to 3 sols,
96and then use less strict values.
97
98\item If the run remains very unstable and requires too much dissipation
99or a too small timestep, a good tip to help stabilize the model
100is to decrease the vertical extension of your run and the number of
101layer (one generally zoom to study near-surface process, so 20 to 22
102layers and a vertical extension up to 60 or 80 km is usually enough).
103
104\end{itemize}
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