Parallelization and Visual Analysis of Multidimensional Fields: Application to Ozone Production, Destruction, and Transport in Three Dimensions

The three-dimensional, spectral transport model used in the current project was first successfully integrated over climatological time scales by Dr. Guang Ping Lou for the simulation of atmospheric N2O using the United Kingdom Meteorological Office (UKMO) 4-dimensional, assimilated wind and temperat...

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Main Authors: Heiner, Jeremy, Vetter, Jeffrey, Schwan, Karsten, Eisenhauer, Greg, Alyea, Fred, Trauner, Mary, Kindler, Thomas, Ribarsky, M. William, Silva, Dilma, Gu, Weiming, Waldrop, Jeffrey, Wang, Ray, Jean, Yves, Martin, Vernard, Schroeder, Beth
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19960015562
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spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:19960015562 2023-05-15T13:47:44+02:00 Parallelization and Visual Analysis of Multidimensional Fields: Application to Ozone Production, Destruction, and Transport in Three Dimensions Heiner, Jeremy Vetter, Jeffrey Schwan, Karsten Eisenhauer, Greg Alyea, Fred Trauner, Mary Kindler, Thomas Ribarsky, M. William Silva, Dilma Gu, Weiming Waldrop, Jeffrey Wang, Ray Jean, Yves Martin, Vernard Schroeder, Beth Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available Jan. 1996 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19960015562 unknown Document ID: 19960015562 Accession ID: 96N21453 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19960015562 No Copyright CASI Environment Pollution NASA-CR-200525 NAS 1.26:200525 1996 ftnasantrs 2019-08-31T23:03:54Z The three-dimensional, spectral transport model used in the current project was first successfully integrated over climatological time scales by Dr. Guang Ping Lou for the simulation of atmospheric N2O using the United Kingdom Meteorological Office (UKMO) 4-dimensional, assimilated wind and temperature data set. A non-parallel, FORTRAN version of this integration using a fairly simple N2O chemistry package containing only photo-chemical reactions was used to verify our initial parallel model results. The integrations reproduced the gross features of the observed stratospheric climatological N2O distributions but also simulated the structure of the stratospheric Antarctic vortex and its evolution. Subsequently, Dr. Thomas Kindler, who produced much of the parallel version of our model, enlarged the N2O model chemistry package to include N2O reactions involving O(D-1) and also introduced assimilated wind data from NASA as well as UKMO. Initially, transport calculations without chemistry were run using Carbon-14 as a non-reactive tracer gas with the result that large differences in the transport properties of the two assimilated wind data sets were apparent from the resultant Carbon-14 distributions. Subsequent calculations for N2O, including its chemistry, with the two input winds data sets with verification from UARS satellite observations have refined the transport differences between the two such that the model's steering capabilities could be used to infer the correct climatological vertical velocity fields required to support the N2O observations. During this process, it was also discovered that both the NASA and the UKMO data contained spurious values in some of the higher frequency wave components, leading to incorrect local transport calculations and ultimately affecting the large scale properties of the model's N2O distributions, particularly at tropical latitudes. Subsequent model runs with wind data that had been filtered to remove some of the high frequency components produced much more realistic N2O distributions. During the past few months, the UKMO wind data base for a complete two-year period was processed into spectral form for model use. This new version of the input transport data base now includes complete temperature fields as well as the necessary wind data. This was done to facilitate advanced chemical calculations in the parallel model which often depend upon temperature. Additional UKMO data is being added as it becomes available. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic Environment Pollution
spellingShingle Environment Pollution
Heiner, Jeremy
Vetter, Jeffrey
Schwan, Karsten
Eisenhauer, Greg
Alyea, Fred
Trauner, Mary
Kindler, Thomas
Ribarsky, M. William
Silva, Dilma
Gu, Weiming
Waldrop, Jeffrey
Wang, Ray
Jean, Yves
Martin, Vernard
Schroeder, Beth
Parallelization and Visual Analysis of Multidimensional Fields: Application to Ozone Production, Destruction, and Transport in Three Dimensions
topic_facet Environment Pollution
description The three-dimensional, spectral transport model used in the current project was first successfully integrated over climatological time scales by Dr. Guang Ping Lou for the simulation of atmospheric N2O using the United Kingdom Meteorological Office (UKMO) 4-dimensional, assimilated wind and temperature data set. A non-parallel, FORTRAN version of this integration using a fairly simple N2O chemistry package containing only photo-chemical reactions was used to verify our initial parallel model results. The integrations reproduced the gross features of the observed stratospheric climatological N2O distributions but also simulated the structure of the stratospheric Antarctic vortex and its evolution. Subsequently, Dr. Thomas Kindler, who produced much of the parallel version of our model, enlarged the N2O model chemistry package to include N2O reactions involving O(D-1) and also introduced assimilated wind data from NASA as well as UKMO. Initially, transport calculations without chemistry were run using Carbon-14 as a non-reactive tracer gas with the result that large differences in the transport properties of the two assimilated wind data sets were apparent from the resultant Carbon-14 distributions. Subsequent calculations for N2O, including its chemistry, with the two input winds data sets with verification from UARS satellite observations have refined the transport differences between the two such that the model's steering capabilities could be used to infer the correct climatological vertical velocity fields required to support the N2O observations. During this process, it was also discovered that both the NASA and the UKMO data contained spurious values in some of the higher frequency wave components, leading to incorrect local transport calculations and ultimately affecting the large scale properties of the model's N2O distributions, particularly at tropical latitudes. Subsequent model runs with wind data that had been filtered to remove some of the high frequency components produced much more realistic N2O distributions. During the past few months, the UKMO wind data base for a complete two-year period was processed into spectral form for model use. This new version of the input transport data base now includes complete temperature fields as well as the necessary wind data. This was done to facilitate advanced chemical calculations in the parallel model which often depend upon temperature. Additional UKMO data is being added as it becomes available.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Heiner, Jeremy
Vetter, Jeffrey
Schwan, Karsten
Eisenhauer, Greg
Alyea, Fred
Trauner, Mary
Kindler, Thomas
Ribarsky, M. William
Silva, Dilma
Gu, Weiming
Waldrop, Jeffrey
Wang, Ray
Jean, Yves
Martin, Vernard
Schroeder, Beth
author_facet Heiner, Jeremy
Vetter, Jeffrey
Schwan, Karsten
Eisenhauer, Greg
Alyea, Fred
Trauner, Mary
Kindler, Thomas
Ribarsky, M. William
Silva, Dilma
Gu, Weiming
Waldrop, Jeffrey
Wang, Ray
Jean, Yves
Martin, Vernard
Schroeder, Beth
author_sort Heiner, Jeremy
title Parallelization and Visual Analysis of Multidimensional Fields: Application to Ozone Production, Destruction, and Transport in Three Dimensions
title_short Parallelization and Visual Analysis of Multidimensional Fields: Application to Ozone Production, Destruction, and Transport in Three Dimensions
title_full Parallelization and Visual Analysis of Multidimensional Fields: Application to Ozone Production, Destruction, and Transport in Three Dimensions
title_fullStr Parallelization and Visual Analysis of Multidimensional Fields: Application to Ozone Production, Destruction, and Transport in Three Dimensions
title_full_unstemmed Parallelization and Visual Analysis of Multidimensional Fields: Application to Ozone Production, Destruction, and Transport in Three Dimensions
title_sort parallelization and visual analysis of multidimensional fields: application to ozone production, destruction, and transport in three dimensions
publishDate 1996
url http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19960015562
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source CASI
op_relation Document ID: 19960015562
Accession ID: 96N21453
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19960015562
op_rights No Copyright
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