GPU acceleration of the FESOM-2 ocean and sea-ice model

Author(s):  
Gijs van den Oord ◽  
Alessio Sclocco ◽  
Georges-Emmanuel Moulard ◽  
David Guibert ◽  
Dmitry Sidorenko ◽  
...  

<p>FESOM-2 is a finite volume ocean circulation and sea ice model developed by the Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI). It solves the primitive equations using the hydrostatic and Bousinessq approximations on an unstructured grid, allowing seamless mesh resolution increase towards eddy-resolving scales in regions of high variability or along coast lines. FESOM-2 is a highly optimized MPI-parallel Fortran code that displays excellent scaling to tens of thousands of cores. In the context of ESiWACE-2 services, we have explored the benefits of GPU acceleration of FESOM-2 in a six-month engineering effort. We have determined the flux-corrected tracer transport, and in particular the advection of temperature and salinity, to be a dominant factor in the application profile and we have ported this routine to GPUs using both OpenACC and CUDA-C. We conclude that the memory access patterns in FESOM-2 are suitable to map onto GPU accelerators and that both strategies are viable options, giving significant speedups for tracer advection in high-resolution mesh configurations. We have benchmarked the ported application on Nvidia Kepler, Volta and Ampere architectures and observe that our tuned kernels can approach the peak memory bandwidth, and we also see that OpenACC offers a competitive performance with less development and maintenance effort. We conclude that an expansion of the OpenACC directives is the most promising road to utilize upcoming GPU-equipped exascale machines for FESOM-2.</p>

1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 339-339
Author(s):  
W.D Hibler ◽  
Peter Ranelli

Sea-ice drift and dynamics can significantly affect the exchanges of heat between the atmosphere and ocean and salt fluxes into the ocean. The ice drift and dynamics, in turn, can be modified by the ocean circulation. This is especially true of the ice margin location whose seasonal characteristics are largely controlled by the substantial oceanic heat flux in the Greenland Sea due to convective overturning.A useful framework to analyze the interannual variability of ice–ocean interaction effects relevant to climatic change is the diagnostic ice–ocean model developed by Hibler and Bryan (1987). In this model, the oceanic temperature and salinity is weakly relaxed (except in the upper layer of the ocean which is essentially driven by the ice dynamic-thermodynamic sea-ice model) to climatological temperature and salinity data. This procedure allows seasonal and interannual variability to be simulated while still preventing the baroclinic characteristics of the ocean circulation from gradually drifting off into a total model defined state. However, in the work of Hibler and Bryan only the seasonal equilibrium characteristics of this model with the same forcing repeated year after year have been considered.In order to begin to examine the interannual behavior of this model, we have carried out a three-year simulation for the Arctic Greenland and Norwegian seas over the time period 1981–83. (The geographical region is essentially the same as used by Hibler and Bryan.) This three year simulation is carried out after an initial two year spin up using the 1981 atmospheric forcing data. For comparison purposes, an ice model simulation with only a fixed depth mixed layer was also carried out over this time interval.The results of these two simulations are analyzed with special attention to the ice margin characteristics in the Greenland and Norwegian seas to determine the role of ocean circulation on the variability there. The ice margin results are also compared to the variability in the northward transports of heat through the Faero-Shetland passage which in the fully-coupled model are calculated rather than specified.


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 339
Author(s):  
W.D Hibler ◽  
Peter Ranelli

Sea-ice drift and dynamics can significantly affect the exchanges of heat between the atmosphere and ocean and salt fluxes into the ocean. The ice drift and dynamics, in turn, can be modified by the ocean circulation. This is especially true of the ice margin location whose seasonal characteristics are largely controlled by the substantial oceanic heat flux in the Greenland Sea due to convective overturning. A useful framework to analyze the interannual variability of ice–ocean interaction effects relevant to climatic change is the diagnostic ice–ocean model developed by Hibler and Bryan (1987). In this model, the oceanic temperature and salinity is weakly relaxed (except in the upper layer of the ocean which is essentially driven by the ice dynamic-thermodynamic sea-ice model) to climatological temperature and salinity data. This procedure allows seasonal and interannual variability to be simulated while still preventing the baroclinic characteristics of the ocean circulation from gradually drifting off into a total model defined state. However, in the work of Hibler and Bryan only the seasonal equilibrium characteristics of this model with the same forcing repeated year after year have been considered. In order to begin to examine the interannual behavior of this model, we have carried out a three-year simulation for the Arctic Greenland and Norwegian seas over the time period 1981–83. (The geographical region is essentially the same as used by Hibler and Bryan.) This three year simulation is carried out after an initial two year spin up using the 1981 atmospheric forcing data. For comparison purposes, an ice model simulation with only a fixed depth mixed layer was also carried out over this time interval. The results of these two simulations are analyzed with special attention to the ice margin characteristics in the Greenland and Norwegian seas to determine the role of ocean circulation on the variability there. The ice margin results are also compared to the variability in the northward transports of heat through the Faero-Shetland passage which in the fully-coupled model are calculated rather than specified.


Author(s):  
Jong-Ho Nam ◽  
Inha Park ◽  
Ho Jin Lee ◽  
Mi Ok Kwon ◽  
Kyungsik Choi ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jong-Ho Nam ◽  
Inha Park ◽  
Ho Jin Lee ◽  
Mi Ok Kwon ◽  
Kyungsik Choi ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 111-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Achim Stössel

This paper investigates the long-term impact of sea ice on global climate using a global sea-ice–ocean general circulation model (OGCM). The sea-ice component involves state-of-the-art dynamics; the ocean component consists of a 3.5° × 3.5° × 11 layer primitive-equation model. Depending on the physical description of sea ice, significant changes are detected in the convective activity, in the hydrographic properties and in the thermohaline circulation of the ocean model. Most of these changes originate in the Southern Ocean, emphasizing the crucial role of sea ice in this marginally stably stratified region of the world's oceans. Specifically, if the effect of brine release is neglected, the deep layers of the Southern Ocean warm up considerably; this is associated with a weakening of the Southern Hemisphere overturning cell. The removal of the commonly used “salinity enhancement” leads to a similar effect. The deep-ocean salinity is almost unaffected in both experiments. Introducing explicit new-ice thickness growth in partially ice-covered gridcells leads to a substantial increase in convective activity, especially in the Southern Ocean, with a concomitant significant cooling and salinification of the deep ocean. Possible mechanisms for the resulting interactions between sea-ice processes and deep-ocean characteristics are suggested.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2174
Author(s):  
Lijian Shi ◽  
Sen Liu ◽  
Yingni Shi ◽  
Xue Ao ◽  
Bin Zou ◽  
...  

Polar sea ice affects atmospheric and ocean circulation and plays an important role in global climate change. Long time series sea ice concentrations (SIC) are an important parameter for climate research. This study presents an SIC retrieval algorithm based on brightness temperature (Tb) data from the FY3C Microwave Radiation Imager (MWRI) over the polar region. With the Tb data of Special Sensor Microwave Imager/Sounder (SSMIS) as a reference, monthly calibration models were established based on time–space matching and linear regression. After calibration, the correlation between the Tb of F17/SSMIS and FY3C/MWRI at different channels was improved. Then, SIC products over the Arctic and Antarctic in 2016–2019 were retrieved with the NASA team (NT) method. Atmospheric effects were reduced using two weather filters and a sea ice mask. A minimum ice concentration array used in the procedure reduced the land-to-ocean spillover effect. Compared with the SIC product of National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), the average relative difference of sea ice extent of the Arctic and Antarctic was found to be acceptable, with values of −0.27 ± 1.85 and 0.53 ± 1.50, respectively. To decrease the SIC error with fixed tie points (FTPs), the SIC was retrieved by the NT method with dynamic tie points (DTPs) based on the original Tb of FY3C/MWRI. The different SIC products were evaluated with ship observation data, synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sea ice cover products, and the Round Robin Data Package (RRDP). In comparison with the ship observation data, the SIC bias of FY3C with DTP is 4% and is much better than that of FY3C with FTP (9%). Evaluation results with SAR SIC data and closed ice data from RRDP show a similar trend between FY3C SIC with FTPs and FY3C SIC with DTPs. Using DTPs to present the Tb seasonal change of different types of sea ice improved the SIC accuracy, especially for the sea ice melting season. This study lays a foundation for the release of long time series operational SIC products with Chinese FY3 series satellites.


Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 174
Author(s):  
Günther Heinemann ◽  
Sascha Willmes ◽  
Lukas Schefczyk ◽  
Alexander Makshtas ◽  
Vasilii Kustov ◽  
...  

The parameterization of ocean/sea-ice/atmosphere interaction processes is a challenge for regional climate models (RCMs) of the Arctic, particularly for wintertime conditions, when small fractions of thin ice or open water cause strong modifications of the boundary layer. Thus, the treatment of sea ice and sub-grid flux parameterizations in RCMs is of crucial importance. However, verification data sets over sea ice for wintertime conditions are rare. In the present paper, data of the ship-based experiment Transarktika 2019 during the end of the Arctic winter for thick one-year ice conditions are presented. The data are used for the verification of the regional climate model COSMO-CLM (CCLM). In addition, Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data are used for the comparison of ice surface temperature (IST) simulations of the CCLM sea ice model. CCLM is used in a forecast mode (nested in ERA5) for the Norwegian and Barents Seas with 5 km resolution and is run with different configurations of the sea ice model and sub-grid flux parameterizations. The use of a new set of parameterizations yields improved results for the comparisons with in-situ data. Comparisons with MODIS IST allow for a verification over large areas and show also a good performance of CCLM. The comparison with twice-daily radiosonde ascents during Transarktika 2019, hourly microwave water vapor measurements of first 5 km in the atmosphere and hourly temperature profiler data show a very good representation of the temperature, humidity and wind structure of the whole troposphere for CCLM.


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