Multi-year simulations at kilometre scale with the Integrated Forecasting System coupled to FESOM2.5/NEMOv3.4

Thomas Rackow, Xabier Pedruzo-Bagazgoitia,Tobias Becker,Sebastian Milinski,Irina Sandu, Razvan Aguridan,Peter Bechtold, Sebastian Beyer, Jean Bidlot,Souhail Boussetta,Michail Diamantakis, Peter Dueben,Emanuel Dutra,Richard Forbes,Helge F. Goessling,Ioan Hadade, Jan Hegewald,Sarah Keeley, Lukas Kluft,Nikolay Koldunov, Alexei Koldunov, Tobias Kölling, Josh Kousal,Kristian Mogensen,Tiago Quintino,Inna Polichtchouk, Domokos Sármány,Dmitry Sidorenko,Jan Streffing,Birgit Sützl, Daisuke Takasuka,Steffen Tietsche, Mirco Valentini,Benoît Vannière,Nils Wedi,Lorenzo Zampieri,Florian Ziemen

crossref(2024)

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摘要
Abstract. We report on the first multi-year km-scale global coupled simulations using ECMWF’s Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) coupled to both the NEMO and FESOM ocean-sea ice models, as part of the Horizon 2020 Next Generation Earth Modelling Systems (nextGEMS) project. We focus mainly on the two unprecedented IFS-FESOM coupled setups, with an atmospheric resolution of 2.8 km and 4.4 km, respectively, and the same spatially varying ocean resolution that reaches locally below 5 km grid-spacing. This is enabled by a refactored ocean model code that allows for more efficient coupled simulations with IFS in a single-executable setup, employing hybrid parallelisation with MPI and OpenMP. A number of shortcomings in the original NWP-focussed model configurations were identified and mitigated over several cycles collaboratively by the modelling centres, academia, and the wider nextGEMS community. The main improvements are (i) better conservation properties of the coupled model system in terms of water and energy balance, which benefit also ECMWF’s operational 9 km IFS-NEMO model, (ii) a realistic top-of-the-atmosphere (TOA) radiation balance throughout the year, (iii) improved intense precipitation characteristics, and (iv) eddy-resolving features in large parts of the mid- and high-latitude oceans (finer than 5 km grid-spacing) to resolve mesoscale eddies and sea ice leads. New developments made at ECMWF for a better representation of snow and land use, including a dedicated scheme for urban areas, were also tested on multi-year timescales. We provide first examples of significant advances in the realism and thus opportunities of these km-scale simulations, such as a clear imprint of resolved Arctic sea ice leads on atmospheric temperature, impacts of km-scale urban areas on the diurnal temperature cycle in cities, and better propagation and symmetry characteristics of the Madden-Julian Oscillation.
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