Mixed finite elements for numerical weather prediction
C. J. Cotter, J. Shipton

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how mixed finite element methods satisfying finite element exterior calculus can be effectively used for horizontal discretisation in numerical weather prediction, offering advantages over traditional grid methods.
Contribution
It introduces a family of mixed finite element methods that generalize polygonal C-grid finite difference methods, ensuring properties like energy and mass conservation without requiring orthogonal grids.
Findings
Methods preserve energy and mass conservation.
They avoid spurious pressure modes.
Numerical examples validate the methods' effectiveness.
Abstract
We show how two-dimensional mixed finite element methods that satisfy the conditions of finite element exterior calculus can be used for the horizontal discretisation of dynamical cores for numerical weather prediction on pseudo-uniform grids. This family of mixed finite element methods can be thought of in the numerical weather prediction context as a generalisation of the popular polygonal C-grid finite difference methods. There are a few major advantages: the mixed finite element methods do not require an orthogonal grid, and they allow a degree of flexibility that can be exploited to ensure an appropriate ratio between the velocity and pressure degrees of freedom so as to avoid spurious mode branches in the numerical dispersion relation. These methods preserve several properties of the C-grid method when applied to linear barotropic wave propagation, namely: a) energy conservation,…
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