1 / 12

Numerical Weather and Climate Prediction ATOC 4500-7500

Numerical Weather and Climate Prediction ATOC 4500-7500. Prerequisites. Atmospheric (or fluid) dynamics and thermodynamics Calculus through differential equations Permission of the instructor. Course Philosophy. Designed for model users, not hard-core developers

maegan
Télécharger la présentation

Numerical Weather and Climate Prediction ATOC 4500-7500

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Numerical Weather and Climate PredictionATOC 4500-7500

  2. Prerequisites • Atmospheric (or fluid) dynamics and thermodynamics • Calculus through differential equations • Permission of the instructor

  3. Course Philosophy • Designed for model users, not hard-core developers • The scope is broad, without a great deal of depth in any single area

  4. Textbook • Title: Numerical Weather and Climate Prediction • Availability – CU bookstore (I’ll notify you when it is in stock)

  5. Text and course content • Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION • Chapter 2. THE GOVERNING SYSTEMS OF EQUATIONS • Chapter 3. NUMERICAL SOLUTIONS TO THE EQUATIONS • Chapter 4. PHYSICAL-PROCESS PARAMETERIZATIONS • Chapter 5. MODELING SURFACE PROCESSES • Chapter 6. MODEL INITIALIZATION AND DATA ASSIMILATION • Chapter 7. ENSEMBLE TECHNIQUES • Chapter 8. PREDICTABILITY • Chapter 9. MODEL VERIFICATION METHODS • Chapter 10. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN IN MODEL-BASED RESEARCH • Chapter 11. TECHNIQUES FOR ANALYZING MODEL OUTPUT • Chapter 12. OPERATIONAL NUMERICAL WEATHER PREDICTION • Chapter 13. POST-PROCESSING MODEL OUTPUT • Chapter 14. SPECIAL-APPLICATIONS MODELS • Chapter 15. COMPUTATIONAL FLUID-DYNAMICS MODELS • Chapter 16. CLIMATE MODELING AND DOWNSCALING

  6. Approximate Schedule • Topic schedule by week – see syllabus • Exam 1 – week 6 • Exam 2 – week 12 • Final exam – last week of class

  7. Class format • Readings in preparation for class will be clearly defined. • Class format will be a combination of discussion of topics in the reading, lecture, discussion of lab projects.. • We will try different approaches for motivating discussion – perhaps students will pose/record questions as they read the material, and addressing these will be a focus of the discussion. • Lab projects – these model-based experiments will be assigned throughout the course to illustrate concepts being discussed.

  8. Grading • 2 exams plus final - 20% each • Lab projects – 20% • Homework – 20%

  9. Course computing • Lab projects will involve coding simple models, and running them to illustrate numerical properties of solutions. • There is no particular computing language required, but Fortran is used in the geosciences.

  10. Student Responsibilities • Check email at least once a day. • Attend class. • Email or call me if there is a problem. • Participate in class discussions. • Let me know if you are going to miss class because of planned trips.

  11. Instructor Responsibilities • Announce reading assignments • Provide basic (not extensive) advice on code debugging.

  12. Class Web Sitehttp://www.rap.ucar.edu/~warner/ - text errata - syllabus - lab assignments

More Related