source: trunk/UTIL/PYTHON/README.PP @ 781

Last change on this file since 781 was 781, checked in by aslmd, 12 years ago

UTIL PYTHON. added a gfortran script to compile mcd fortran stuff in python. added comments here and there.

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1**************************************
2**************************************
3**************************************
4    PLANETOPLOT TUTORIAL EXAMPLES
5**************************************
6         Authors : AC + AS
7**************************************
8  DON'T FORGET YOUR BEST FRIEND IS
9     pp.py -h [or] pp.py --help
10**************************************
11**************************************
12**************************************
13
14The program pp.py works on virtually any NETCDF file.
15If not, please contact us, it is usually an easy fix to make it work.
16
17************************************
18SIMPLE EXAMPLES on a SAMPLE GCM FILE
19************************************
20Goal: The simplest, most minimal example. Mapping topography.
21pp.py -f diagfired.nc
22
23Goal: I would like finer contours.
24pp.py -f diagfired.nc --div 30
25
26Goal: I would like wind vectors.
27pp.py -f diagfired.nc -W
28
29Goal: I would like more vectors [i.e. lower the stride].
30pp.py -f diagfired.nc -W -s 1
31
32Goal: I want to map a given field (surface temperature).
33pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tsurf
34
35Goal: I want to map two fields next to one another (topography and tauice).
36pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v phisinit,tauice
37
38Goal: I want to map two fields, tauice shaded, topography contoured, same plot.
39pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -w phisinit
40
41Goal: I want to map a field but projected on the sphere.
42pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -p ortho
43
44Goal: I want to redefine the minimum and maximum values shown.
45pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9
46
47Goal: I want to insert holes wherever values are lower than 0.2 and higher than 0.9
48pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H
49
50Goal: I want to fill holes with an background image of Mars [you have to be connected to Internet]
51pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H -b vishires
52
53Goal: I want the same map, but projected on the sphere
54pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H -b vishires -p ortho
55
56Goal: I want the same map, but projected on the sphere and centered on longitude 100°
57pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H -b vishires -p ortho --blon -100
58
59Goal: I want the same map, but projected with north polar stereographic view
60pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H -b vishires -p npstere
61
62Goal: I want the same map, but with a transparent field to see background image
63pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H -b vishires -p npstere --trans 0.6
64
65Goal: I want to save this in PNG format
66pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H -b vishires -p ortho -S png
67
68Goal: I want to animate this along time axis
69pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H -b vishires -p ortho -S avi
70
71Goal: I want to animate this along time axis with fps=12
72pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tauice -m 0.2 -M 0.9 -H -b vishires -p ortho --rate 12
73
74Goal: I want to plot results from two simulation files next to one another
75pp.py -f diagfired.nc,diagfired.nc -v tsurf
76
77Goal: I want to plot results for two different times in the file next to one another
78pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tsurf --time 0.5 --time 0.9
79
80Goal: I want to plot averaged results in the file from one time to another time
81pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tsurf --time 0.5,0.9
82
83Goal: I want to plot the minimum/maximum value over times stored in the file
84pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tsurf --redope mint
85pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tsurf --redope maxt
86
87Goal: I want to plot a section of temperature at longitude 0
88pp.py -f diagfired.nc --var temp --lon 0 --time 0.5
89
90Goal: I want to plot a section of zonally-averaged temperature
91pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v temp --lon -180,180 --time 0.5
92
93Goal: I want to plot a section of zonally-averaged temperature with contours of zonally-averaged zonal wind
94pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v temp -w u --lon -180,180 --time 0.5
95
96Goal: I want to plot a section of zonally-averaged temperature and zonally-averaged zonal wind
97pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v temp,u --lon -180,180 --time 0.5
98
99Goal: I want to plot a globally-averaged 1D temperature profile
100pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v temp --time 0.5 --lat -90,90 --lon -180,180
101
102Goal: I want to overplot few globally-averaged 1D temperature profiles at different times
103pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v temp --time 0.5 --time 0.9 --lat -90,90 --lon -180,180
104
105Goal: I want to overplot lat=0,lon=0 1D temperature profiles at different times
106pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v temp --time 0.5 --time 0.9 --lat 0 --lon 0 --ymax 20 --xmin 180.
107
108******************** [specific mesoscale]
109
110Goal: I want to plot results for two different LOCAL times in the file next to one another
111pp.py -f wrfout_d01_2024-05-03_01:00:00 -v TSURF --time 4 --time 7 --axtime lt
112
113Goal: I want to plot a section of temperature at longitude -120 between AMR altitudes 0 km and 30 km with 50 levels
114pp.py -f wrfout_d01_2024-05-03_01:00:00 -v tk --time 4 --axtime lt --lon -120 -i 3 -l 0,30,50
115
116Goal: I want to plot a section of temperature at longitude -120 between ALS altitudes 0 km and 30 km with 50 levels
117pp.py -f wrfout_d01_2024-05-03_01:00:00 -v tk --time 4 --axtime lt --lon -120 -i 4 -l 0,30,50
118
119***********************************************************************************
120EXAMPLE : The classic mountain GW plot
121***********************************************************************************
122pp.py -f wrfout_d01_9999-09-09_09:00:00 -v W,tpot --lat 60 --time 15 -i 4 -l 30,130,100 --div 50
123***********************************************************************************
124
125***********************************************************************************
126EXAMPLE : Plotting surface temperature maps from TES
127***********************************************************************************
128pp.py -f TES/TES.MappedClimatology.nadir.MY25.nc -v Tsurf_day -p npstere --blat 60 --trans 0.5 -b vishires --time 50
129***********************************************************************************
130pp.py -f /d5/emlmd/TES/TES.MappedClimatology.nadir.MY25.nc,/d5/emlmd/TES/TES.MappedClimatology.nadir.MY26.nc   -p npstere -v Tsurf_day --time 90,105 --time 105,120 --time 120,135 --time 135,150 --blat 70 --div 30 -m 190 -M 270 -b vishires --trans 0.7
131***********************************************************************************
132pp.py -f /d5/emlmd/TES/TES.MappedClimatology.nadir.MY25.nc,/d5/emlmd/TES/TES.MappedClimatology.nadir.MY26.nc -p npstere -v Tsurf_day --time 110,130 --blat 70 --div 30 -m 190 -M 270 -b vishires --trans 0.7 -c onebar --title "Surface temperature (K)"
133***********************************************************************************
134dust from TES
135pp.py -f TES.MappedClimatology.nadir.MY25.nc -v tau_dust -p cyl -c Oranges -m 0.0 -M 2.0 --div 20 --trans 0.8 -b molabw -S avi -T
136
137***********************************************************************************
138COMMENTED EXAMPLE : The globe with surface temperature and winds
139***********************************************************************************
140pp.py -f diagfired.nc -v tsurf -w phisinit -m 120 -M 320 --div 20 -W -s 1 --vert 0 -p ortho --blat 20 --blon -80 -S html -t $W
141***********************************************************************************
142See results here: http://www.lmd.jussieu.fr/~aslmd/EXAMPLES/LMD_GCM_movie_tsurf_UV/anim.html
143***********************************************************************************
144pp.py -f diagfired.nc
145        OK. You probably get that one.
146-v tsurf -w phisinit
147        Shade surface temperature. Contour topography.
148-m 120 -M 320 --div 20
149        Surface temperature is shown with bounds 120K to 320K. Use 20 levels for shading.
150-W -s 1
151        Include wind vectors. Prescribe a stride of 1: vectors are shown at every grid point.
152--vert 0
153        Show fields in the first (lowermost) level.
154-p ortho --blat 20 --blon -80
155        Use orthographic projection ('whole sphere' view). Center view on lon -80E and lat 20N.
156-S html
157        Make nice webpage with animation and controls.
158-t /u/aslmd/WWW/EXAMPLES
159        Move resulting plot files to the given folder.
160
161***********************************************************************************
162COMMENTED EXAMPLE : The dust storm section movie
163***********************************************************************************
164pp.py -f wrfout_d01_2024-05-30_12:00:00,wrfout_d01_2024-05-30_18:00:00,wrfout_d01_2024-05-31_00\:00\:00 --operation cat -v QDUST --lat -3. -i 3 -l -1,37,100 --div 30 -c Oranges_r -m 0. -M 5.e-5 -t $W --rate 12 --xmin=5 --xmax=115
165***********************************************************************************
166See results here: http://www.lmd.jussieu.fr/~aslmd/EXAMPLES/LMD_MMM_d1_10km_movie_QDUST_-1000m-AMR_lat_-3_Ls134.8/anim.html
167***********************************************************************************
168pp.py
169        OK. You probably get that one.
170-f wrfout_d01_2024-05-30_12:00:00,wrfout_d01_2024-05-30_18:00:00,wrfout_d01_2024-05-31_00\:00\:00 --operation cat
171        Mesoscale outputs are splitted in several files. In that case, this was 1 file per 6 simulated hours.
172        The above options allow to concatenate files along time axis for 1D time series or animated movies
173        [if --operation cat is omitted, this is a multiplot call, with one subplot per files in -f].
174-v QDUST
175        Choose to plot dust mass mixing ratio.
176-i 3 -l -1,37,100
177        Set a call to vertical interpolator [compiled with f2py, thereby being embedded as a Python routine] for each of the files in the -f instance.
178        -i sets the kind of interpolation, 3 means Above MOLA Reference Altitude. -l sets the range for altitude levels: from -1 km to 37 km with 100 levels.
179--div 30
180        The number of contours used for shaded plots. Higher value means smoother appearance.
181-c Oranges_r
182        Choose a colorbar adapted to display a dust storm.
183-m 0. -M 5.e-5
184        Choose bounds for the plotted field. This one is adapted to show dust mass mixing ratio.
185-t $W
186        Put resulting figure or movie in another destination folder.
187        Personally I have an environnement variable W which is somewhere in my system where the file automatically appears on the web,
188                hence is easy to see from a remote place.
189--rate 12 --lat -3.
190        Define prescribed axis. A section in latitude -3°N. A time animation with 12 frame per seconds.
191        So the displayed field will be an altitude/longitude section. Alternative: "-S avi" instead of "--rate 12" creates a default 8 fps movie.
192        Alternative II: "-S html" instead of --rate 12 creates a nice webpage.
193--xmin=5 --xmax=115
194        Define limits for the displayed section. Here we just want to get rid of transition rows where atmospheric fields are
195                relaxed towards prescribed GCM fields.
196
197
198***********************************************************************************
199Simple 2D plot: Zonal mean.
200**********************************************************************************
201
202Goal:
203
204Plot the zonal mean temperature from a netcdf field representing one month.
205
206Command:
207
208pp.py -f POLAR_NIGHT_RUN/diagfi16.nc --var temp --lon 180,-180 --time 0,65
209
210Note:
211
212The --time, --lat, --lon and --vert command takes in input values corresponding to the unit stored in the netcdf file, and not indices ! For example, if the "Time" unit is in sol (which is common for a gcm output), --time 2 means sol 2.0 and not index 2 along the time direction. Consequently, one can ask --time 2.5 for temperatures at 12:00 on sol 2.
213
214Means are easy to perform by specifying a range. Here: --time 0,65 and --lat -180,180.
215
216***********************************************************************************
217Vertical interpolation of the field.
218***********************************************************************************
219
220Goal:
221
222Calls to zrecast and api are built-in the python functions. One can call them using -i with the appropriate argument (see meso.py -h or gcm.py -h). Here is an example that re-interpolates data using zrecast before plotting it in a 2D contour.
223
224Command:
225
226pp.py -f POLAR_NIGHT_RUN/diagfi16.nc --var temp --lon -180,180 --time 0,65 -i 4
227
228Note:
229
230All interpolation modes available in zrecast and api (pressure, AGL, distance from planet center, etc...) are theoretically possible, but may not be coded yet in the routine. See gcm.py -h or meso.py -h.
231
232For this example, the default behavior of zrecast for -i 4 is to interpolate in (m) from the local surface, between 0 and 150 km. The command will generate a reinterpolated netcdf file "POLAR_NIGHT_RUN/diagfi16_S.nc" with only the requested field, which is not deleted afterward.
233
234
235***********************************************************************************
2362D plot of the difference between two files.
237***********************************************************************************
238
239Goal:
240
241Comparing two .nc files with similar dimension axis can be done in a single command, by specifying which files to compare and the comparison operator (i.e. is it a difference, an addition, etc...). When comparing data along a vertical axis, it can be wise to also ask for an interpolation of the fields to make sure the comparison is correct.
242
243Command:
244
245pp.py -f POLAR_NIGHT_RUN/stats16.nc --var temp --lon -180,180 --time 1 -i 4 --fref POLAR_NIGHT_REF/stats16.nc --operation - --mope -2 --Mope 2 --title "Polar temperatures with new parametrizations" --titleref "Reference run"
246
247Note:
248
249The command will output 3 plots: the field from file 1, the field from file 2, and the comparison between the two. One can specify specific names for the title of these plots by using --title and --titleref for the titles of file 1 and file 2, and can specify different plotting range for the normal field (-m -M) and the compared field (--mope --Mope).
250
251One can combine this command with projections and means, so that for example, to compare co2 depletion at the south pole:
252
253pp.py -f POLAR_NIGHT_RUN/start16.nc --var co2 --vert 0,150 --proj spstere --time 1 -i 4 --fref POLAR_NIGHT_REF/start16.nc --operation - --mope -0.5 --Mope 0.5 --title "Polar co2 with new parametrizations" --titleref "Reference run"
254
255***********************************************************************************
2562D plot of data with missing values, along a pressure axis (decreasing with height).
257***********************************************************************************
258
259Goal:
260
261By default, python will force the y-axis of a 2D plot to be ordered by increasing values. Here is how to force it otherwise.
262
263Command:
264
265pp.py -f TES.MappedClimatology.nadir.MY25.nc --var T_nadir_day --lat -76. --time 90 --ymin 500 --ymax 1 -m 128 -M 148 -H
266
267Note:
268
269The axis reversal is done by specifying ymin and ymax in the right order. One can also simply use --inverty and not specify (ymin,ymax). Missing values (out of range values) are replaced by holes by the option "-H".
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