A testing procedure is designed to assess the convergence property of a global climate model with respect to time step size, based on evaluation of the root-mean-square temperature difference at the end of very short (1 h) simulations with time step sizes ranging from 1 s to 1800 s. A set of validation tests conducted without sub-grid scale parameterizations confirmed that the method was able to correctly assess the convergence rate of the dynamical core under various configurations. The testing procedure was then applied to the full model, and revealed a slow convergence of order 0.4 in contrast to the expected first-order convergence. Sensitivity experiments showed without ambiguity that the time stepping errors in the model were dominated by those from the stratiform cloud parameterizations, in particular the cloud microphysics. This provides a clear guidance for future work on the design of more accurate numerical methods for time stepping and process coupling in the model.
Revised: July 30, 2015 |
Published: February 11, 2015
Citation
Wan H., P.J. Rasch, M. Taylor, and C. Jablonowski. 2015.Short-term Time Step Convergence in a Climate Model.Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems 7, no. 1:215-225.PNNL-SA-103971.doi:10.1002/2014MS000368