Exploring physics-dynamics coupling using moist shallow water equations
Nell Hartney, Thomas M. Bendall, Jemma Shipton

TL;DR
This paper introduces simplified moist shallow water equations to study physics-dynamics coupling in atmospheric models, comparing split-physics and integrated-physics approaches for improved numerical stability and accuracy.
Contribution
It develops a new integrated-physics formulation that eliminates the need for physics-dynamics coupling, serving as a benchmark for other methods.
Findings
Integrated-physics model requires no physics-dynamics coupling.
Varying coupling approaches affects timestep stability and accuracy.
The integrated-physics model provides a useful ground-truth for comparison.
Abstract
One of the key choices for numerical models of geophysical fluids is how parametrisations of physical processes interact with the numerical methods that handle the resolved flow, known in the atmospheric community as the dynamical core. As both the dynamical core and parametrisations of physics processes continue to evolve and improve, the issue of physics-dynamics coupling - how these two different parts of the model interact - becomes ever more important. In this paper we use two variations of the moist shallow water equations to develop a simplified framework that can be used to investigate some of the questions associated with physics-dynamics coupling. The shallow water equations act as a simplified dynamical core that is computationally cheap but still retains pertinent features of the atmosphere, and the introduction of moisture means the addition to the model of a physical…
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