Rotating shallow water flow under location uncertainty with a structure-preserving discretization
We introduce a new representation of the rotating shallow water equations based on a stochastic transport principle. The derivation relies on a decomposition of the fluid flow into a large-scale component and a noise term that models the unresolved small-scale flow. The total energy of such a random model is demonstrated to be preserved along time for any realization. To preserve this structure, we combine an energy (in space) preserving discretization of the underlying deterministic model with approximations of the stochastic terms that are based on standard finite volume/difference operators. This way, our method can directly be used in existing dynamical cores of global numerical weather prediction and climate models. For an inviscid test case on the f-plane we use a homogenous noise and illustrate that the spatial part of the stochastic scheme preserves the total energy of the system. Moreover, using an inhomogenous noise, we show for a barotropically unstable jet on the sphere that the proposed random model better captures the structure of a large-scale flow than a comparable deterministic model.
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