This test case illustrates the advection of an ice patch across an East/West and North/South periodic channel
over a slab ocean (i.e. one ocean layer), and with an AGRIF zoom (1:3) in the center
The purpose of this configuration is to test the advection of the ice patch in
and across the AGRIF boundary
One can either impose ice velocities or ice-atm. stresses and let rheology define velocities
(see README for details)
This test case illustrates the propagation of an anticyclonic eddy over a Beta plan and a flat bottom.
It is implemented here with an online refined subdomain (1:3) out of which the vortex propagates.
It serves as a benchmark for quantitative estimates of nesting errors as in Debreu et al. (2012) :cite:DEBREU2012
,
Penven et al. (2006) :cite:PENVEN2006
or Spall and Holland (1991) :cite:SPALL1991
.
The animation below (sea level anomaly in meters) illustrates with two 1:2 successively nested grids how the vortex smoothly propagates out of the refined grids.
The purpose of this test case is to evaluate the impact of various schemes and new development with the iceshelf cavities circulation and melt.
This configuration served as initial assesment of the ice shelf module in Losh et al. (2008) :cite:LOSCH2008
and Mathiot et al. (2017) :cite:MATHIOT2017
.
The default setup is the one described here <http://staff.acecrc.org.au/~bkgalton/ISOMIP/test_cavities.pdf>
_.
The figure below (meridional overturning circulation) illustrates the circulation generated after 10000 days by the ice shelf melting (ice pump).
The LOCK EXCHANGE experiment is a classical fluid dynamics experiment that has been adapted
by Haidvogel and Beckmann (1999) :cite:HAIDVOGEL1999
for testing advection schemes in ocean circulation models.
It has been used by several authors including Burchard and Bolding (2002) :cite:BURCHARD2002
and Ilicak et al. (2012) :cite:ILICAK2012
.
The LOCK EXCHANGE experiment can in particular illustrate the impact of different choices of numerical schemes
and/or subgrid closures on spurious interior mixing.
Below the animation of the LOCK_EXCHANGE test case using the advection scheme FCT4 (forth order) for tracer and ubs for dynamics.
.. image:: _static/LOCK-FCT4_flux_ubs.gif
The OVERFLOW experiment illustrates the impact of different choices of numerical schemes
and/or subgrid closures on spurious interior mixing close to bottom topography.
The OVERFLOW experiment is adapted from the non-rotating overflow configuration described
in Haidvogel and Beckmann (1999) :cite:HAIDVOGEL1999
and further used by Ilicak et al. (2012) :cite:ILICAK2012
.
Here we can assess the behaviour of the second-order tracer advection scheme FCT2 and fortht-order FCT4, z-coordinate and sigma coordinate (...).
Below the animation of the OVERFLOW test case in sigma coordinate with the forth-order advection scheme FCT4. .. image:: _static/OVF-sco_FCT4_flux_cen-ahm1000.gif
A set of simple closed basin geometries for testing the Wetting and drying capabilities. Examples range from a closed channel with EW linear bottom slope to a parabolic EW channel with a Gaussian ridge.
Below the animation of the test case 7. This test case is a simple linear slope with a mid-depth shelf with an open boundary forced with a sinusoidally varying ssh. This test case has been introduced to emulate a typical coastal application with a tidally forced open boundary with an adverse SSH gradient that, when released, creates a surge up the slope. The parameters are chosen such that the surge rises above sea-level before falling back and oscillating towards an equilibrium position
.. image:: _static/wad_testcase_7.gif
East-west periodic canal of variable size with several initial states and associated geostrophic currents (zonal jets or vortex).
.. image::_static/CANAL_image.gif
This test case illustrates the advection of an ice patch across an East/West and North/South periodic channel over a slab ocean (i.e. one ocean layer). The configuration is similar to ICE_AGRIF, except for the AGRIF zoom. The purpose of this configuration is to test the advection schemes available in the sea-ice code (for now, Prather and Ultimate-Macho from 1st to 5th order), especially the occurence of overshoots in ice thickness
This experiment is the classical Schar & Smolarkiewicz (1996) test case :cite:SCHAR1996
,
which has been used in :cite:LIPSCOMB2004
,
and in which very specific shapes of ice concentration, thickness and volume converge toward the center of a basin.
Convergence is unidirectional (in x) while fields are homogeneous in y.
The purpose of this configuration is to test the caracteristics of advection schemes available in the sea-ice code
(for now, Prather and Ultimate-Macho from 1st to 5th order),
especially the constitency between concentration, thickness and volume, and the preservation of initial shapes.
This experiment is the Beckmann and Haidvogel (1993) SEAMOUNT test case :cite:BECKMANN1993
. It is a Gaussian bump in
an East-West periodic channel initialised at rest with a horizontally uniform, exponential vertical density profile.
The domain is defined by a terrain-following coordinate. The purpose of this configuration is to demonstrate
the relative performance of various hpg schemes in reducing the spurious velocities generated due to numerical
errors arising from the misalignment the grid s-level with the pure z-level.
The complete and up-to-date set of test cases is available on this NEMO test cases Github repository.
Download it directly in the ./tests
root directory using following command:
git clone http://github.com/NEMO-ocean/NEMO-examples
Once downloaded, the test case can be compiled and run as any other NEMO confiuration, see the "Buid the frameowrk section here
Each test case subdirectory includes some plots and/or pythin notebook discribing the expercted results, possible sensitivuty tests, etc..
To propose a test case contribution, you need to build up its directory including:
- a README.md including
- Detailed desscription of the test case: goal and results
- Author as contact person
- The release/revision number of NEMO on which this tests case is working
- Published document to quote as reference for the test case
- All the input files or the program to build them
- Some outputs and/or figures from the results, to demonstrate the interest and capabilities of the test case
- Hopefully a python notebook to run the test case and produce the results
This directory should then be sent as a pull request to this github repository