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The impact of advection schemes on restratifiction due to lateral shear and baroclinic instabilities

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Mohammadi-Aragh, M., Klingbeil, K., Brueggemann, N., Eden, C., & Burchard, H. (2015). The impact of advection schemes on restratifiction due to lateral shear and baroclinic instabilities. Ocean Modelling, 94, 112-127. doi:10.1016/j.ocemod.2015.07.021.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-002D-CF13-7
Abstract
This paper quantifies spurious dissipation and mixing of various advection schemes in idealised experiments of lateral shear and baroclinic instabilities in numerical simulations of a re-entrant Eady channel for configurations with large and small Rossby numbers. In addition, a two-dimensional barotropic shear instability test case is used to examine numerical dissipation of momentum advection in isolation, without any baroclinic effects. Effects of advection schemes on the evolution of background potential energy and the dynamics of the restratification process are analysed. The advection schemes for momentum and tracers are considered using several different methods including a recently developed local dissipation analysis. As highly accurate but computationally demanding schemes we apply WENO and MPS, and as more efficient lower-order total variation diminishing (TVD) schemes we use among others the SPL-max-1/3 and a third-order-upwind scheme. The analysis shows that the MP5 and SPL-max-1/3 schemes provide the most accurate results. Following our comprehensive analysis of computational costs, the MP5 scheme is approximately 2.3 times more expensive in our implementation. In contrast to the configuration with a small Rossby number, in which significant differences between schemes are apparent, the different advection schemes behave similarly for a larger Rossby number. Regions of high numerical dissipation are shown to be associated with low grid Reynolds numbers. The major outcome of the present study is that generally positive global numerical dissipation and positive background potential energy evolution delay the restratification process. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved,