Support for Multi-scale Ocean Modelling Capabilities for UK Community (ICOM)
Lead Research Organisation:
Natural Environment Research Council
Department Name: UNLISTED
Abstract
Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.
People |
ORCID iD |
Christopher Pain (Principal Investigator) |
Publications
Cotter C
(2009)
A mixed discontinuous/continuous finite element pair for shallow-water ocean modelling
in Ocean Modelling
Fang F
(2008)
A POD reduced-order 4D-Var adaptive mesh ocean modelling approach
in International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids
Funke S
(2011)
A wetting and drying algorithm with a combined pressure/free-surface formulation for non-hydrostatic models
in Advances in Water Resources
Maddison J
(2011)
Accurate representation of geostrophic and hydrostatic balance in unstructured mesh finite element ocean modelling
in Ocean Modelling
Farrell P
(2011)
Automated continuous verification for numerical simulation
in Geoscientific Model Development
Kramer S
(2010)
Solving the Poisson equation on small aspect ratio domains using unstructured meshes
in Ocean Modelling
Fang F
(2011)
The independent set perturbation adjoint method: A new method of differentiating mesh-based fluids models
in International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids
Description | How to achieve fundamental balance by the finite element choice (balance between Coriolis, free surface height and buoyancy and pressure gradient). Also how hydrostatic balance can be achieved by separate treatments of hydrostatic pressure. How to enforce balance after interpolating the solution variables from one mesh to another when adapting the mesh to optimally resolve the physics. We have also applied the research to discover the likely cause of events in an ancient tsaunami in the mediterianian through this geometry conforming modelling apability and developed a number of insights into paleo oceanography such as the state of the life (which will be dictated by mixing) in paleo shallow oceans. This is also helping exploration companies determine where to look for oil and gas. |
Exploitation Route | We have pioneered the user of adaptive and unstructured meshes for use with environmental flow models as well as adjoint and rapid models. These are starting to be taken up. For example: the GungHo project lead by the Met. office to develop an unstructured mesh atmospheric model users numerical methods (as well as researchers that developed these) derived from the advanced numerical methods developed by us. The widely used FEniCs finite element model now users an adjoint method for data assimilation and optimization derived by our researchers. The work has lead to the atham-fluidity modelling being developed by Cambridge, Imperial College and the Institute of Atmospheric Physics in China. Fluidity, developed here, is now an open source model used throughout the world. |
Sectors | Energy Manufacturing including Industrial Biotechology Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology |
Description | The Met office are building on the numerical methods we developed within the GungHo project. The Institute of Atmospheric Physics in China have incorporated the adaptive mesh adaptivity approach into their regional scale atmospheric model to transport pollution and chemistry and are experiencing substantial savings in CPU time (or greater resolution) that will be used operationally to achieve results that we can be more confident in. The adaptive methods (interpolation) have been incorporated into open-Foam - the most well used open source CFD code. The work on ocean modelling is also helping exploration companies determine where to look for oil and gas. |
First Year Of Impact | 2009 |
Sector | Education,Environment |
Impact Types | Societal Economic |