Current progress and prospects in numerical techniques for weather prediction models
DOI10.1016/0021-9991(83)90040-2zbMath0528.76053OpenAlexW1980974892MaRDI QIDQ786599
Publication date: 1983
Published in: Journal of Computational Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0021-9991(83)90040-2
turbulencenumerical weather predictiondifferential equations to model atmospheric processesECMWF modelefficient integration schemesmesoscale processesperiod from 1977 to 1981sub- grid- scale motionsUnited Kingdom operational model
Meteorology and atmospheric physics (86A10) Stability and instability of geophysical and astrophysical flows (76E20) Geophysics (86A99)
Related Items (2)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A mathematical introduction to fluid mechanics
- A small-scale dynamic model using a terrain-following coordinate transformation
- On classical solutions of the two-dimensional non-stationary Euler equation
- Problems with different time scales for partial differential equations
- Blow-up for quasi-linear wave equations in three space dimensions
- Estimates of intermittency, spectra, and blow-up in developed turbulence
- Singular limits of quasilinear hyperbolic systems with large parameters and the incompressible limit of compressible fluids
- On Numerical Boundary Treatment of Hyperbolic Systems for Finite Difference and Finite Element Methods
- On the convergence and error problems of the calculation of the pressure gradient force in sigma coordinate models
- Radiation boundary conditions for acoustic and elastic wave calculations
- Theoretical and Practical Aspects of Some Initial Boundary Value Problems in Fluid Dynamics
- Global existence for nonlinear wave equations
- Numerical viscosity and the entropy condition
- Spontaneous Singularity in Three-Dimensional Inviscid, Incompressible Flow
- Problems with Different Time Scales for Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations
- Initial boundary value problems for hyperbolic systems
This page was built for publication: Current progress and prospects in numerical techniques for weather prediction models