GEOMETRIC: Geometry and Energetics of Ocean Mesoscale Eddies and Their Representation in Climate models
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Oxford
Department Name: Oxford Physics
Abstract
The ocean circulation is dominated by an energetic mesoscale eddy field on spatial scales of 10-100 km, analogous to weather systems in the atmosphere. These eddies are unresolved, or at best inadequately resolved, in the ocean models used for long-range climate projections. Thus it is necessary to parameterise the impacts of the missing mesoscale eddies on the large-scale circulation. The vast majority of numerical ocean circulation models employ the Gent and McWilliams "eddy parameterisation" which acts to flatten density surfaces, mimicking the release of potential energy to fuel the growth of the mesoscale eddies. A key parameter in this eddy parameterisation is the "eddy diffusivity", which is critical as it plays a leading order role in setting global ocean circulation, stratification and heat content, the adjustment time scale of the global circulation, and potentially atmospheric CO2.
In this project, we will implement a new closure for the Gent and McWilliams eddy diffusivity, derived from first principles, which depends only on the ocean stratification, the eddy energy and a non-dimensional parameter that is less than or equal to 1. If the eddy energy is known, then there is no freedom to specify explicitly any additional dimensional parameters, such as an eddy diffusivity. For this reason, we argue that existing approaches to parameterising eddies in ocean climate models are fundamentally flawed.
Our new approach requires solving an equation for the depth-integrated eddy energy. This is a significant challenge and will form a major component of the present project. However, we believe that solving for the eddy energy is tractable as we have some understanding of the key physical ingredients. These key ingredients include the source of eddy energy through instability of the large-scale flow, westward propagation of eddies, diffusion of eddy energy, dissipation of eddy energy in western boundary "eddy graveyards", and dissipation of eddy energy through bottom drag and lee wave generation.
Once a consistent eddy energy budget is incorporated, our new eddy parameterisation leads to three highly desirable results, which serve as important proofs of concept:
1. It reproduces the correct dimensional growth rate for eddies in a simple model of instability of atmospheric and oceanic flows for which there is an exact mathematical solution.
2. Assuming perfect knowledge of the eddy energy, it reproduces the eddy diffusivity diagnosed from high-resolution computer simulations of fully turbulent instabilities.
3. It predicts and explains the physics of "eddy saturation", the remarkable insensitivity of the size of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current to surface wind forcing, and a long standing challenge and known deficiency of current eddy parameterisations.
The work plan will consist of four inter-related work packages:
1. Implementation and validation of the new eddy parameterisation framework in the NEMO ocean model, used by NERC and the UK Met Office, along with other European partners.
2. Development and refinement of the parameterised eddy energy budget.
3. Quantifying the impact of the new parameterisation on the oceanic uptake of heat and passive tracers in the UK Earth System Model, used for the UK contribution to the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) climate projections.
4. Project management, to ensure that the work is delivered fully and in a timely manner.
In this project, we will implement a new closure for the Gent and McWilliams eddy diffusivity, derived from first principles, which depends only on the ocean stratification, the eddy energy and a non-dimensional parameter that is less than or equal to 1. If the eddy energy is known, then there is no freedom to specify explicitly any additional dimensional parameters, such as an eddy diffusivity. For this reason, we argue that existing approaches to parameterising eddies in ocean climate models are fundamentally flawed.
Our new approach requires solving an equation for the depth-integrated eddy energy. This is a significant challenge and will form a major component of the present project. However, we believe that solving for the eddy energy is tractable as we have some understanding of the key physical ingredients. These key ingredients include the source of eddy energy through instability of the large-scale flow, westward propagation of eddies, diffusion of eddy energy, dissipation of eddy energy in western boundary "eddy graveyards", and dissipation of eddy energy through bottom drag and lee wave generation.
Once a consistent eddy energy budget is incorporated, our new eddy parameterisation leads to three highly desirable results, which serve as important proofs of concept:
1. It reproduces the correct dimensional growth rate for eddies in a simple model of instability of atmospheric and oceanic flows for which there is an exact mathematical solution.
2. Assuming perfect knowledge of the eddy energy, it reproduces the eddy diffusivity diagnosed from high-resolution computer simulations of fully turbulent instabilities.
3. It predicts and explains the physics of "eddy saturation", the remarkable insensitivity of the size of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current to surface wind forcing, and a long standing challenge and known deficiency of current eddy parameterisations.
The work plan will consist of four inter-related work packages:
1. Implementation and validation of the new eddy parameterisation framework in the NEMO ocean model, used by NERC and the UK Met Office, along with other European partners.
2. Development and refinement of the parameterised eddy energy budget.
3. Quantifying the impact of the new parameterisation on the oceanic uptake of heat and passive tracers in the UK Earth System Model, used for the UK contribution to the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) climate projections.
4. Project management, to ensure that the work is delivered fully and in a timely manner.
Planned Impact
This project will implement a new geometric eddy parameterisation in the multi-national NEMO ocean model, currently used by the UK Met Office as the ocean component of their coupled climate model, by the NERC research community as the designated UK ocean model of choice, and by many other European partners, climate centres and international partners such as the ECMWF. We have already demonstrated that the new geometric eddy parameterisation leads to highly desirable improvements, including eddy saturation behaviour which is a feature of eddy-permitting ocean models, but has remained elusive to ocean models with parameterised eddies to date. Moreover, to the extent that we are able to parameterise accurately the depth-integrated eddy energy, we have shown that our new eddy parameterisation framework is able to reproduce diagnosed eddy diffusivities across several orders of magnitude. We therefore anticipate that the proposed work will lead to significant improvements in our ability to model the ocean circulation and more skilful climate projections at the UK Met Office/Hadley Centre, the ECMWF, and indeed more widely.
By implementing our new geometric eddy parameterisation within the UK Earth System Model, we plan explicitly to demonstrate its impact on climate projections. Non-eddy resolving ocean models will continue to form an essential component of climate models for the foreseeable future due to the costs of running eddy-permitting models to equilibrium over thousands of years, and over multiple climate projections. The representation of ocean eddies in these models is known to have a significant influence upon the resulting model predictions, in particular on centennial time scales. Our ambition is that this project will radically impact the way in which ocean eddies are modelled in future Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change climate projections.
Wider impact of the research will be realised through:
- Implementation of the new eddy parameterisation framework within the NEMO main trunk.
- Publication of articles in high quality international journals.
- The participation of the lead PI in the NEMO Developers Committee as an Expert Scientist.
- Presentation of key results at international conferences.
- Attendance at smaller specialised meetings within the United Kingdom and internationally.
- The regular maintenance of an online blog, and active participation in social media.
- Public talks, through the Oxford Martin School, wider outreach events organised by the partner institutions (for example, the PI has organised an event at the Royal Society showcasing the work of his sub-Department for the past two years).
- The attraction of physics and mathematics students to NERC science through lectures and talks.
- Published long-form article in the popular media (e.g., The Economist).
By implementing our new geometric eddy parameterisation within the UK Earth System Model, we plan explicitly to demonstrate its impact on climate projections. Non-eddy resolving ocean models will continue to form an essential component of climate models for the foreseeable future due to the costs of running eddy-permitting models to equilibrium over thousands of years, and over multiple climate projections. The representation of ocean eddies in these models is known to have a significant influence upon the resulting model predictions, in particular on centennial time scales. Our ambition is that this project will radically impact the way in which ocean eddies are modelled in future Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change climate projections.
Wider impact of the research will be realised through:
- Implementation of the new eddy parameterisation framework within the NEMO main trunk.
- Publication of articles in high quality international journals.
- The participation of the lead PI in the NEMO Developers Committee as an Expert Scientist.
- Presentation of key results at international conferences.
- Attendance at smaller specialised meetings within the United Kingdom and internationally.
- The regular maintenance of an online blog, and active participation in social media.
- Public talks, through the Oxford Martin School, wider outreach events organised by the partner institutions (for example, the PI has organised an event at the Royal Society showcasing the work of his sub-Department for the past two years).
- The attraction of physics and mathematics students to NERC science through lectures and talks.
- Published long-form article in the popular media (e.g., The Economist).
Organisations
Publications
Zhai X
(2022)
Eddy-induced meridional transport variability at ocean western boundary
in Ocean Modelling
Zhai X
(2020)
Random movement of mesoscale eddies in the global ocean
Yang Z
(2021)
An Idealized Model Study of Eddy Energetics in the Western Boundary "Graveyard"
in Journal of Physical Oceanography
Stanley G
(2022)
Why Mean Potential Vorticity Cannot Be Materially Conserved in the Eddying Southern Ocean
in Journal of Physical Oceanography
Stanley G
(2020)
Ertel Potential Vorticity versus Bernoulli Potential on Approximately Neutral Surfaces in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current
in Journal of Physical Oceanography
Poulsen M
(2019)
A Geometric Interpretation of Southern Ocean Eddy Form Stress
in Journal of Physical Oceanography
Ni Q
(2020)
Random Movement of Mesoscale Eddies in the Global Ocean
in Journal of Physical Oceanography
Mak J
(2018)
Implementation of a Geometrically Informed and Energetically Constrained Mesoscale Eddy Parameterization in an Ocean Circulation Model
in Journal of Physical Oceanography
Description | We have developed a new approach to representing ocean eddies, the analogue of weather systems in the ocean but on a much smaller spatial scale, in climate models. The new approach - now called GEOMETRIC - is based on the fundamental physical laws of energy and momentum conservation and leads to a number of improvements over previous approaches. This work has led to two new NERC research contracts, one of which is currently ongoing. |
Exploitation Route | We are currently implementing GEOMETRIC in the NERC/Met Office ocean model, NEMO, and it should be available by the end of 2022. |
Sectors | Environment |
URL | http://www.marshallocean.net/projects/geometric |
Title | data collection for ORCA2_LIM3_GEOMETRIC |
Description | Data output from ORCA2_LIM3_GEOMETRIC, in relation to the publication Corrigendum to "Acute sensitivity of global ocean circulation and heat content to eddy energy dissipation time-scale"J. Mak, D. P. Marshall, G. Madec, and J. R. Maddison The data here are from ORCA2 calculations with the GEOMETRIC eddy energy advection by mean flow bug fixed, following the experimental procedure reported in "Acute sensitivity of global ocean circulation and heat content to eddy energy dissipation time-scale". The resulting conclusions do not change; ORCA2 calculations display a larger sensitivity compared to the ORCA1 calculations it would seem (the sensitivity seems to be more to do with grid resolution, and less with fixing the bug or GEOMETRIC parameter choices). Various folders have been split out for easier downloading. nemo3.7-8666 contains modified NEMO GEOMETRIC code python contains the post-processing routines, and plotting commands are given in plot_talks.ipynb. The file directory pointers are relative paths and set up for the data organisation given here in this repository ORCA0083-N01 contains reference data from a ORCA012 calculation ORCA2_LIM3 contains sample raw and processed data outputs, as well as restart files for re-running calculations if needed. Spinup data ending at year 1500 is in EXP_GEOM_x100/{SPINUP, RESTARTS}. Rest of the data is from year 3001 to 3100. |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2024 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
URL | https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.5732754 |