Title: ACRONYM Spell Out Full Name
1Tide Models
The Navy sometimes uses the term tide models to
designate those numerical ocean models being run
primarily for the purpose of predicting tidal
heights and/or currents. At this time, the tide
models used by the Navy are run in a 2D mode (no
variation in the vertical dimension). By
definition these models must include tidal
forcing, but they may also include other types of
forcing, just as other ocean circulation models
used by the Navy may include tidal forcing.
2GFMPL TP
- The GFMPL Tide Prediction program is not an ocean
model in the sense of the other models discussed
in this course. - TP can predict hourly tidal heights at a fixed
number of reference stations by using tidal
constants (amplitude and phase) previously
calculated from measurements made at those
locations. - Additionally, it can predict tidal heights at a
set of secondary stations, by applying known
corrections to the reference stations.
3- Tidal heights may only be forecast at locations
for which historical tidal data are available
(i.e., tide stations provided by the data base).
- This method does not account for sea level
variations due to changes in atmospheric
pressure, nor those due to wind forcing. - Tidal currents are not predicted.
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6ADCIRCAdvanced Circulation model
- Primary contacts Cheryl Ann Blain (NRL-SSC),
Steve Haeger (NAVO) - ADCIRC was developed in the late 1980s to early
1990s by Rick Luettich (Univ. of N. Carolina)
and Joannes Westerink (Univ. of Notre Dame) in
conjunction with the Coastal Engineering Research
Center (now called the Engineering Research and
Development Center) of the Army Corps of
Engineers. It is currently used in a 2D mode by
NAVO for tidal and surge current and height
predictions in littoral areas, although in the
future, tidal currents may only be shown for
those areas where the currents are dominated by
tides. A 3D version, though still barotropic, is
available and a baroclinic version is under
development.
7ADCIRChttp//www.marine.unc.edu/C_CATS/adcirc/
http//www.nd.edu/adcirc/
ADCIRC is a finite element, free surface
barotropic ocean circulation model. NAVO runs
the 2D version with tidal and wind forcing, for
the primary purpose of predicting sea level
height. While sea level is not strongly
influenced by density structure, currents may be,
so tidal current forecasts are likely to be best
where the water is well-mixed top to bottom.
8Physics
- Shallow water equations, including non-linear
terms - The equations have been formulated using the
traditional hydrostatic pressure and Boussinesq
approximations. A quadratic form of bottom
friction is used. Although the drag coefficient
may vary in space, it is generally specified as
constant.
9Domain
- Due to the complications in designing and
implementing an efficient and accurate grid, NAVO
runs ADCIRC only in a limited number of domains.
It is technically feasible, but
personnel-intensive. - NRL and others are working to implement an
automated grid generation program so that ADCIRC
can be rapidly relocated to new geographic areas.
It is presently being used in a research,
although not an operational, setting. - NAVO is currently running ADCIRC for three
geographic regions the Yellow Sea and Sea of
Japan the Arabian Gulf and Gulf of Oman and the
western North Atlantic Ocean including the
Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico and US Eastern Seaboard.
10Operational ADCIRC Domains
11Grid and Coordinate System
- ADCIRC uses a finite element grid in the
horizontal. - ADCIRC may be run in either Cartesian or
spherical coordinates. NAVO uses spherical
coordinates. - Since it is 2D, there is no vertical coordinate.
The velocities are a depth-average.
12Spatial and Temporal Resolution
- One of the advantages of a finite element grid,
is that the spatial resolution is continuously
variable over the domain. Generally it varies
from a few 10s of meters to several kilometers. - The model as implemented at NAVO uses a time step
of 30 seconds.
13Yellow Sea and Sea of Japan
14THE ADVANTAGES OF FINITE ELEMENTS
South Korea
Mississippi River Delta
Realistic coastline morphology
Large domains with remote boundaries
Fine-scale resolution of inter-tidal zones
Western North Atlantic
Courtesy of Cheryl Ann Blain
15Boundary Conditions
- Open boundaries are in water depths gt 1000 m.
- Tidal elevations from the Grenoble tide model (Le
Provost et al. 1994) are applied on the open
boundaries. - While it is an option in ADCIRC, wetting and
drying along land-sea boundaries is not included
in the NAVO implementation. - The condition at the land-sea boundary is no
normal flow.
16Tidal constituents
17Forcing
- In addition to the tidal elevations applied on
the open boundaries, astronomical tide generating
forces are applied over the whole domain. - Atmospheric pressure and wind stress forcing from
either NOGAPS (the western North Atlantic Ocean),
COAMPSTM (the Yellow Sea and Sea of Japan) or a
combination of the two (Arabian Gulf and Gulf of
Oman) is used.
18Initialization
- The model is started from rest.
- The density is constant and uniform.
- NAVO generally uses a spin-up time of 3 days
before results are used. - A longer spin-up time is desirable. In the
future, this might be accomplished by changes in
the implementation, and/or taking advantage of a
warm start capability after a long initial
spin-up.
19Data Assimilation
- No data is assimilated into this model.
20Implementation
- Can be executed on all super-computer and
workstation platforms. - Computationally efficient.
21Output
- Tidal heights and currents are output at 30-min
intervals for a 48-hr forecast. - The numerical output is post-processed to produce
a graphical format. The graphics generally do
not show the whole domain, but rather are focused
on predetermined areas of the grid. This may
affect how the results are interpreted.
22Following example is from Shatt Al Arab.
NAVO Product Information
- Spatial resolution variable
- Forcing 27 km COAMPS_SW_ASIA winds and
atmospheric pressure and tidal forcing - Output available through MVL sea level relative
to MSL (mean sea level) depth-averaged current
speed and direction - Temporal resolution and forecast duration 30
min. out to 48 h - Product update cycle 12 h
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25Arabian GulfYellow Sea
26References
- Blain, C.A., R.H. Preller, and A.P. Rivera, Tidal
prediction using the Advanced Circulation Model
(ADCIRC) and a relocatable PC-based system,
Oceanography, 15 (1), 77-87, 2002. - Luettich, R., and J. Westerink, Users Manual
ADCIRC, A (Parallel) Advanced Circulation Model
for Oceanic, Coastal and Estuarine Waters,
http//www.marine.unc.edu/C_CATS/adcirc/, 2000.
27PCTides
- Primary contacts Ruth Preller, NRL-SSC
- Over the past 3 years, NRL has developed a
globally relocatable tide/surge prediction
capability, designed for use on or near
continental shelves. - The capability is utilized for locations where
neither observations nor a regularly run
operational tide prediction model, such as
ADCIRC, exists. (Blain et al. 2002).
28PCTideshttp//www7320.nrlssc.navy.mil/pctides/
- PCTides is the NRLs globally relocatable
tide/surge forecast system used for the rapid
prediction of tidal amplitude and phase, as well
as barotropic ocean currents. - There are 2D and 3D versions, both based on the
shallow water equations. Normally the 2D version
is used. - All databases, except for the wind forcing, are
internal to the PCTides system. - (All quotations in this section are taken from
the web site listed above, unless otherwise
noted.)
29Physics
- PCTides includes 2 tide/surge models the Global
Environmental Modeling Services (GEMS) Coastal
Ocean Model (GCOM2D and GCOM3D). - GCOM2D is a depth-integrated, barotropic
hydrodynamic model. It solves for SSH and mean
current structure (i.e. no vertical variation). - GCOM3D allows for vertical variations in the
currents. It can be run in either barotropic mode
(no thermal or density variation), or baroclinic
mode (solves for temperature and salinity). The
baroclinic mode is not generally available, and
will not be discussed here. - A wetting and drying algorithm for simulation of
coastal flooding is included.
30Domain
- Selected by the user, using a rubber-banding
method through the GUI or by entering
latitude/longitude limits. - Domains may be nested within one another to
achieve higher spatial resolution in the inner
domain.
31Grid and Coordinate System
- The version most commonly used by Navy METOC is
2D, so has no vertical coordinate. - The 3D version uses a z-coordinate system in the
vertical. - A Cartesian grid is used in the horizontal plane,
with C type finite differencing. - Grid arrays are constructed such that there are
no more than 40,000 grid points (e.g. 200 x 200).
This keeps simulations fast, while still allowing
for large enough regions with fine enough
resolution.
32Spatial Resolution
- Selected by the user through the GUI
- Generally from 1 to 10 km
- Bathymetry and open boundary conditions are
automatically interpolated to the domain and grid
selected by the user.
33Temporal resolution
- To optimize efficiency, different time steps are
used to solve different aspects of the equations. - The continuity equation and gravity wave and
Coriolis terms use the shortest time step. - The nonlinear advection terms use an intermediate
time step. - The surface and bottom stress terms are solved
using the longest time step.
34Bathymetry
- 2' global bathymetry developed by NRL from the
following bathymetry data bases - This bathymetry provides an improved coastline
and improved matching of bathymetry data near the
coastline.
Database Spatial resolution
ETOPO5 5'
DBDBV 5' / 2' / 1' / 0.5 '
DAMEE (North Atlantic) 2.5 '
Gulf of Mexico 0.01
CHOI (Yellow Sea) 1.0 '
GTOPO2 (Sandwell) 2.0 '
IBCAO (Arctic) 2.5 km
35Boundary Conditions
- Included in PCTides are the Finite Element
Solutions 95.1/2.1 (Shum et al. 1997) from the
Grenoble global tide model (the same as those
used for ADCIRC). These are used to provide sea
surface displacements at the open boundaries of
the ocean model. - The same 8 tidal constituents as used for ADCIRC
are used for PCTides. - Atmospheric barometric displacement (change in
sea level due to atmospheric pressure) is also
specified at the open boundaries.
36User must make sure there is global tidal data
along all the open boundaries of the chosen
domain.
Grenoble Model M2 Tide Amplitude and Phase
- White areas indicate where there are no tidal
solutions from global tidal model
37Forcing
- The model may be driven by astronomical tidal
forcing (through the open boundaries) and / or
surface winds and pressures. - Winds and pressures may be entered manually (in
which case they are uniform over the domain), or
obtained from NOGAPS, COAMPSTM, or DAMPS through
MetCast.
38Initialization
- All velocities are set to zero initially.
- The initial elevation field is obtained by
interpolating the FES 95.1/2.1 elevation field to
the model grid. - It is customary to allow about 12 hrs for spin-up
of the model. This allows spurious waves and
boundary forcing to propagate out of the
computational domain. - The program is set up to automatically start the
simulation 12 hrs before the user-chosen start
time (or the start of the wind file if one is
being used). - With wind forcing, a longer spin-up time ( 24
hrs) is used.
39Data Assimilation
- Sea level variations from measurements made at
the 4500 International Hydrographic Office tidal
stations are included in a PCTides database, and
are used to constrain the solutions by using a
weighted nudging approach described in Hubbert et
al. 2001 (Blain et al. 2002).
40Implementation
- Can be run on PCs and UNIX systems.
- The average PCTides 48 hour forecast takes
anywhere from 3 to 10 minutes of run time on a
500 MHz PC. (Blain et al. 2002)
41The PCTides System
NRL combined Bathymetry
Winds/pressures from NOGAPS, COAMPS, DAMPS
IHO Coastal Tide Station Data
Boundary Conditions FES95.1/.2
2-D Ocean Model (Barotropic)
Tidal Heights and Barotropic Ocean Currents
42Output
- Results may be output in graphical or text
format. - Time series, with a time step typically of 10-12
min, of sea level and currents are output at
user-specified station locations. - Spatial fields of velocity and sea level are
output at a user-specified time interval (the
minimum interval is 30 min). - The length of the forecast is determined by the
user, or the length of the wind forecast if one
is being used. - The sea level deviations output must be added to
a specified reference level (such as mean sea
level) to get actual water depths.
43Adapted from Harding et al.s 2001 GRC poster
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47Reliability
- Both ADCIRC and PCTides generally produce sea
level predictions that are within 10 cm and 30
minutes of observed values. - There are some areas of the world, such as off
the U.S. West Coast, where results may be worse
than quoted above due to reduced accuracy of the
boundary conditions from the global tidal model. - The following images are from the PCTides OPTEST.
48Chesapeake Bay Region4.4 km resolution
49Chesapeake Stationdepth 8 m
50PCTides Evaluation in the Yellow Sea
PCTides currents were evaluated against observed
currents from 4 bottom-mounted current profilers
from Sept. 1-30,1995 Current data were
not assimilated into the model.
Courtesy of Ruth Preller
51PCTides versus measured currents Sept. 25-30, 1995
Courtesy of Ruth Preller
52References
- Blaine, C.A., R.H. Preller, and A.P. Rivera,
Tidal prediction using the Advanced Circulation
Model (ADCIRC) and a relocatable PC-based system,
Oceanography, 15 (1), 77-87, 2002. - Hubbert, G.D., R.H. Preller, P.G. Posey, and S.N.
Carroll, Software design description for the
globally relocateable Navy time/atmosphere
modeling system (PCTides), pp. 97, Naval Research
Laboratory, Stennis Space Center, MS, 2001. - Preller, R.H., P.G. Posey, G.D. Hubbert, S.N.
Carroll, and L. Orsi, User's manual for the
globally relocatable Navy tide/atmosphere
modeling system (PCTides), pp. 68, Naval Research
Laboratory, Stennis Space Center, MS, 2001. - Preller, R, P. Posey, G. Dawson, K. Miles, M.
Escarra, J. Ganong (2002) http//www7320.nrlssc.na
vy.mil/pctides/
53Exercise
- Get tidal height prediction for the same location
using ADCIRC, PCTides, and GFMPL. Go to
http//www.oc.nps.navy.mil/nom/PCTides/