Global Barotropic Tide Modeling Using Inline Self-Attraction and Loading in MPAS-Ocean
Barton, Kristin N.; Pal, Nairita; Brus, Steven R.; Petersen, Mark R.; Arbic, Brian K.; Engwirda, Darren; Roberts, Andrew F.; Westerink, Joannes J.; Wirasaet, Damrongsak; Schindelegger, Michael
2022-11
Citation
Barton, Kristin N.; Pal, Nairita; Brus, Steven R.; Petersen, Mark R.; Arbic, Brian K.; Engwirda, Darren; Roberts, Andrew F.; Westerink, Joannes J.; Wirasaet, Damrongsak; Schindelegger, Michael (2022). "Global Barotropic Tide Modeling Using Inline Self-Attraction and Loading in MPAS-Ocean." Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems 14(11): n/a-n/a.
Abstract
We examine ocean tides in the barotropic version of the Model for Prediction Across Scales (MPAS-Ocean), the ocean component of the Department of Energy Earth system model. We focus on four factors that affect tidal accuracy: self-attraction and loading (SAL), model resolution, details of the underlying bathymetry, and parameterized topographic wave drag. The SAL term accounts for the tidal loading of Earth’s crust and the self-gravitation of the ocean and the load-deformed Earth. A common method for calculating SAL is to decompose mass anomalies into their spherical harmonic constituents. Here, we compare a scalar SAL approximation versus an inline SAL using a fast spherical harmonic transform package. Wave drag accounts for energy lost by breaking internal tides that are produced by barotropic tidal flow over topographic features. We compare a series of successively finer quasi-uniform resolution meshes (62.9, 31.5, 15.7, and 7.87 km) to a variable resolution (45 to 5 km) configuration. We ran MPAS-Ocean in a single-layer barotropic mode forced by five tidal constituents. The 45 to 5 km variable resolution mesh obtained the best total root-mean-square error (5.4 cm) for the deep ocean (> $ > $1,000 m) M2 ${mathrm{M}}_{2}$ tide compared to TPXO8 and ran twice as fast as the quasi-uniform 8 km mesh, which had an error of 5.8 cm. This error is comparable to those found in other forward (non-assimilative) ocean tide models. In future work, we plan to use MPAS-Ocean to study tidal interactions with other Earth system components, and the tidal response to climate change.Plain Language SummaryOver the next century, climate change impacts on coastal regions will include floods, droughts, erosion, and severe weather events. The Department of Energy (DoE) is funding the Integrated Coastal Modeling Project to understand these potential risks better. In this paper, we implement tides in the DoE ocean model. Tides themselves respond to climate change, altering coastal flooding risk assessments. We explore the sensitivity of tides to model resolution (the spacing of model gridpoints), ocean-floor topography, and the so-called “self-attraction and loading” (SAL) effect. Self-attraction and loading occurs as the mass of water in a location fluctuates, causing a deformation of the Earth’s crust and changes in the gravitational potential, which must be accounted for when modeling tides. We present a computationally efficient method of calculating the SAL effects and show that it is more accurate than other commonly used approximations. In future work we will examine interactions of tides with other components of the climate system, including sea ice, floating ice shelves, rivers, and current systems.Key PointsWe calculate the full self-attraction and loading (SAL) term inline, in a barotropic configuration of Model for Prediction Across Scales (MPAS-Ocean)Inclusion of the inline SAL and higher resolution meshes yield improved tidal accuracy in stand-alone barotropic MPAS-Ocean configurationsA 45 to 5-km variable-resolution mesh provides reduced tidal errors with better computational performance than a quasi-uniform 8-km meshPublisher
Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
ISSN
1942-2466 1942-2466
Other DOIs
Types
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Remediation of Harmful Language
The University of Michigan Library aims to describe library materials in a way that respects the people and communities who create, use, and are represented in our collections. Report harmful or offensive language in catalog records, finding aids, or elsewhere in our collections anonymously through our metadata feedback form. More information at Remediation of Harmful Language.
Accessibility
If you are unable to use this file in its current format, please select the Contact Us link and we can modify it to make it more accessible to you.