Abstract
In regional climate modelling, it is well known that domains should be neither too large to avoid a large departure from the driving data, nor too small to provide a sufficient distance from the lateral inflow boundary to allow the full development of the small-scale (SS) features permitted by the finer resolution. Although most practitioners of dynamical downscaling are well aware that the jump of resolution between the lateral boundary condition (LBC) driving data and the nested regional climate model affects the simulated climate, this issue has not been fully investigated. In principle, as the jump of resolution becomes larger, the region of interest in the limited-area domain should be located further away from the lateral inflow boundary to allow the full development of the SS features. A careless choice of domain might result in a suboptimal use of the full finer resolution potential to develop fine-scale features. To address this issue, regional climate model (RCM) simulations using various resolution driving data are compared following the perfect-prognostic Big-Brother protocol. Several experiments were carried out to evaluate the width of the spin-up region (i.e. the distance between the lateral inflow boundary and the domain of interest required for the full development of SS transient eddies) as a function of the RCM and LBC resolutions, as well as the resolution jump. The spin-up distance turns out to be a function of the LBC resolution only, independent of the RCM resolution. When varying the RCM resolution for a given resolution jump, it is found that the spin-up distance corresponds to a fixed number of RCM grid points that is a function of resolution jump only. These findings can serve a useful purpose to guide the choice of domain and RCM configuration for an optimal development of the small scales allowed by the increased resolution of the nested model.
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1 Introduction
Climate models are useful tools to understand past, present and future climate conditions. Coupled global climate models (CGCM) are designed to represent the atmosphere, ocean, cryosphere and land surfaces and their interactions. To simulate the climate in a reasonable time, a large number of simplifying assumptions are made, and several processes are simply parameterised to reduce the computational cost. Nevertheless, achieving resolutions required by several impact studies would drastically increase the computational cost, which would exceed the limits of available computing infrastructure. To overcome this issue, the use of regional climate models (RCM) has become a pragmatic avenue to achieve high-resolution climate simulations at an affordable computational cost. RCM are limited-area models, one-way nested at their lateral boundaries by low-resolution CGCM-simulated or reanalyses data.
CGCM spatial resolution has changed little over the last decade. The average grid mesh of CGCM participating in century-long IPCC AR5 climate projections was about 321 km (equivalent to \(\approx\)T62 using the linear transform grid spacing for spectral models). Whereas RCM grid meshes remained mainly unchanged at 45–60 km for the initial two decades, they have been refined to 10–15 km in the last decade (e.g. EURO-CORDEX, Vautard et al. 2013; Jacob et al. 2014) and have recently reached convection-permitting values of 2.5–4 km (e.g. Pan et al. 2011; Rasmussen et al. 2014; Fosser et al. 2014; Ban et al. 2015). The disparity of resolution between increasingly high-resolution RCM and lateral boundary conditions (LBC) provided by low-resolution CGCM raises important issues, such as the dynamical equilibrium between the inner solution calculated by the RCM and the outer solution provided by LBC, the different formulations and/or prognostic variables in LBC and RCM, and the spatial spin-up. The latter issue is the focus of this paper.
Spatial spin-up is the phenomenon by which small-scale (SS) features that are absent in the driving LBC develop as permitted by the higher spatial resolution of the nested model. Previous studies (Leduc and Laprise 2009; Leduc et al. 2011) have shown that a minimum domain size is required for the SS to develop and reach their full potential. These studies showed that for a jump of resolution between the LBC and the nested model of 12 (roughly equivalent to a T30 spectral model driving a 45 km RCM), a domain size of \(144\times 144\) grid points was barely sufficient for the SS to fully develop in the low levels in summer, and even larger domain sizes were required to reach a full development aloft and in winter due to stronger flow through the domain. With a resolution jump of six, Colin et al. (2010) and Køltzow et al. (2011) noted that precipitation was underestimated near the western (inflow) boundary of their domain, a likely manifestation of spatial spin-up. Brisson et al. (2015) noted some deficiencies in their convection-permitting climate simulations when using single nesting, likely as a result of a large resolution jump combined with large nesting time intervals. Matte et al. (2016) have shown that the use of multiple nesting reduces the resolution jump, with a positive impact on the SS development.
The focus of this study is on characterizing the impact of the resolution jump on SS spin-up in RCM simulations, by analysing the spatial development of SS from the lateral boundaries through the RCM domain, rather than the effect of domain size as in previous studies. The sought outcome of this study is the determination of the “trustworthy” region within an RCM domain, trustworthy in the sense that SS permitted by the high resolution have reached their asymptotic amplitude. The idealised Big-Brother experimental protocol will be used to address this issue. This paper is organized as follows. A brief description of the regional model followed by a description of the experimental design are presented in Sect. 2. The results are detailed in Sect. 3. Finally, Sect. 4 summarises the findings and concludes.
2 Experimental design
The experiments have been performed with the fifth-generation Canadian RCM (CRCM5; see Hernández-Díaz et al. 2013 for a detailed description). The physical parameterization of the CRCM5 is mostly based on the 33-km meso-global GEM model (Bélair et al. 2005, 2009) employed for numerical weather prediction by the Canadian Meteorological Centre (CMC). The model configuration uses Kain-Fritsch deep convection parameterization (Kain and Fritsch 1990), Kuo-transient shallow convection (Kuo 1965; Bélair et al. 2005), Sundqvist resolved-scale condensation (Sundqvist et al. 1989), correlated-K terrestrial and solar radiation schemes (Li and Barker 2005), subgrid-scale orographic effects are parameterized following the McFarlane mountain gravity-wave drag (McFarlane 1987) and the low-level orographic blocking scheme of Zadra et al. (2003), and turbulent kinetic energy closure planetary boundary layer and vertical diffusion (Benoit et al. 1989; Delage and Girard 1992; Delage 1997). Unlike the NWP version of GEM however, CRCM5 uses the most recent version of the Canadian Land Surface Scheme (CLASS 3.5; Verseghy 2000, 2008) that allows a detailed representation of vegetation, land-surface types, organic soil and a flexible number of layers, and lakes are represented by the 1-D FLake model (Martynov et al. 2012). In the vertical, 56 levels are used.
To investigate the impact of the driving data resolution upon the development of SS features in a high-resolution RCM, the Big-Brother Experiment (BBE) protocol, originally designed by Denis et al. (2002b) is used. This experiment employs a perfect prognosis approach that isolates the nesting errors from other modelling errors, thus emphasizing the influence of nesting on the RCM solution. In the BBE, a first simulation named the Big Brother (BB) is realized on the largest possible domain. The BB simulation serves two purposes: (1) it is used as a reference to evaluate the test simulations nicknamed the Little-Brother (LB) simulations, and (2) it provides, after filtering, initial and driving lateral boundary conditions for LB simulations that are performed using the same model formulation and resolution as the BB. The BB data are processed by a low-pass filter to mimic the low-resolution GCM driving data. The resulting filtered BB datasets will be noted BB_Fr, with r the equivalent mesh size resolution. These BB_Fr fields are, in some sense, perfect as far as the large scales are concerned, because they do not suffer from simulation errors that would have occurred in coarse-mesh model simulations. However, the BB_Fr fields are devoid of SS as coarse-mesh GCM simulations would be. The LB-simulated SS can be compared with those of the verifying BB to assess the dynamical downscaling skill of various configurations of LBs and resolution jump by varying BB_Fr. Shown in Fig. 1, the CRCM5 simulation on a 0.15° mesh (roughly 17 km) covering a \(760\times 760\) grid-point free domain centred on Montréal, Québec, Canada, served as BB. The BB simulation is driven by the ERA-Interim reanalysis for eight 2-month long periods, starting on June 1st for summer and November 1st for winter, of the years 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000. For these simulations the time step is 5 min. The BB simulation is driven by ERA-Interim data available at 6-hourly intervals.
Low-resolution LBC were generated by applying a low-pass filter based on the discrete cosine transform (DCT: Denis et al. 2002a), with a gradual response function that attempts to mimic the spectrum of equivalent grid-mesh simulations. The lower and upper limits were chosen to correspond, respectively, to the Nyquist length scale 2 \(\varDelta\)x and to the smallest adequately resolved scales 7 \(\varDelta\)x, as shown by Skamarock (2004) and Cholette et al. (2015), with a cosine-squared function transition between these two values. LBC corresponding to three resolution jumps (J) were generated. For J \(=\) 24, corresponding to a mesh of 3.6° (noted as BB_F3.6), the lower and upper wavelength limits were chosen to be 792 and 2772 km; for J \(=\) 12, corresponding to a mesh of 1.8° (noted as BB_F1.8), the limits were 396 and 1386 km; and for J \(=\) 3, corresponding to a mesh of 0.45° (noted as BB_F0.45), the limits were 100 and 346 km. The LB simulations were performed for 1.5-month periods starting on November 15 for winter and on June 15 for summer (thus leaving out the initial 15 days as spin-up of the BB simulation), for the years 1997 to 2000, using the BB_Fr dataset as IC and LBC (geopotential height, temperature, zonal and meridional winds, specific humidity and water content) at 1-hourly intervals. The LB simulations were performed on a free domain of \(260 \times 260\) grid points (noted as D1 in Fig. 1), surrounding by the Davies zone of 10 grid points which is weighted by a cosine-squared function. Unlike previous studies dealing with spatial spin-up with different domain sizes, here we used a rather large LB domain to ensure that SS amplitudes could develop to their asymptotic value within the domain. The climate statistics of the LB simulations will be compared to those of the BB for the four months of December and July, thus leaving out the initial 15 days as temporal spin-up of the LB simulations. Four sets of LB simulations will be performed; three of them will be nested with datasets BB_F3.6, BB_F1.8 and BB_F0.45, noted as LB_J24, LB_J12 and LB_J3, corresponding to resolution jumps of 24, 12 and 3, respectively, and a fourth one driven directly by BB, noted LB_J1, corresponding to a resolution jump of 1.
3 Results
In the analysis, fine-scale transient eddies in LB simulations driven by various BB_Fr will be compared with those of the reference BB. The departure of the time-mean components (also called transient-eddy component) will be analyzed. Any variable \(\varPsi ({\mathbf {x}},t)\), function of space \(\mathbf {x}\) and time t, will be decomposed as follows
where \(\overline{\bullet }\) is the temporal mean and ’ the time deviation. The transient-eddy standard deviation is obtained as
A DCT filter is employed to isolate the SS from the total field. The DCT filter was configured to eliminate wavelengths larger than 400 km and retain those smaller than 300 km, with a gradual cosine-squared function transition in between. As defined, the SS that are analyzed in LB_J24 and LB_J12 were completely absent of the driving LBC and developed within the LB simulations. However, for LB_J3, the limits of the DCT filter used to produce LB_J3 and the SS field slightly overlap. Thus, a small part of the SS (those with wavelengths in the range 300–346 km) are present in the driving data for this case; nevertheless, the SS spin-up process can still be observed in LB_J3.
Figure 2 illustrates the SS spatial spin-up for different jumps of resolution for the 700-hPa relative vorticity in December; this variable is chosen for its abundant SS features. Figure 2a presents maps of the standard deviation of the SS transient-eddy component for the BB and the four LB_Ji simulations, called \(\sigma ^{\prime }_{BB}\) and \(\sigma ^{\prime }_{Ji}\), respectively, on the free LB domain (see D1 domain in Fig. 1). In the BB, large values are noted on the East Coast, corresponding to the North Atlantic storm track at this period of the year. Some spotty large values are also seen over the Appalachians due to orographic effects. On the flat continent, relatively smooth small values are noted almost everywhere. In the LB_Ji simulations, weaker values can be seen at the western and southern edges of the domain, more pronounced for larger resolution jumps; these smaller values reflect the underdeveloped SS features downstream of the inflow boundaries, with the dominant westerly flow in winter. Spatial spin-up becomes even clearer by looking at the \(\sigma ^{\prime }_{Ji}\) normalized by the reference value \(\sigma ^{\prime }_{BB}\) as shown in Fig. 2b. The red colour corresponds to values near unity, hence confirming the development of the SS features to their asymptotic amplitude. The underestimation of the SS transient-eddy amplitude near the boundary inflow of the domain is clearly visible, especially for the largest resolution jumps. Clearly, results in the spin-up zone should be taken cautiously because the fast atmospheric flow has not yet developed the SS permitted by the fine mesh.
Figure 3 shows the corresponding results in July. Overall, the results in summer are similar than in winter, except that the spin-up zones at the western and southern edges of the domain are narrower due to the weaker general atmospheric circulation in summer than in winter, as noted before by Leduc et al. (2011).
Figures 4 and 5 show the value of the ratio \(\left( \frac{\sigma ^{\prime }_{Ji}}{\sigma ^{\prime }_{BB}}\right)\) along a West-to-East cut, across the domain, for different jump of resolution J, for the 700-hPa relative vorticity SS transient-eddy standard deviation averaged over the middle third of the domain (indicated at the bottom right of Fig. 4a, for December and July, respectively. This West to East section of the domain is used as it corresponds to the mean atmospheric flow for this region. The lower abscissa corresponds to the distance from the western boundary expressed in number of grid points (n) and the upper abscissa correspond to the distance expressed in km. Figures 4a and 5a show the gradual increase of the ratio towards unity with increasing distance from the western boundary. It can be noted that the distance required to approaching the full development of the SS increases with the resolution jump. Hence, when large jump of resolutions are considered, large domains are required to achieve the full development of the SS features permitted by the resolution of the driven model, as noted before by Leduc and Laprise (2009) and Leduc et al. (2011). Figures 4b and 5b show the ratio \(\left( \frac{\sigma ^{\prime }_{Ji}}{\sigma ^{\prime }_{BB}}\right)\) for the relative vorticity at different levels for the J12 case. It can be seen that the SS spin-up distance increases in the vertical, likely related to faster wind speed in the upper levels.
Figure 6 shows the result obtained in a similar experiment configured as previously for December, but with a grid mesh of 0.45° rather than 0.15° for J8 and J12. By comparing this J12 result with the corresponding J12 case with 0.15° shown in Fig. 4, it becomes clear that the spin-up distance varies in proportion to the RCM grid mesh in such a way that it covers the same number of grid points. This indicates that when varying the RCM resolution for a given resolution jump (hence varying the LBC resolution in proportion to the RCM resolution), the spin-up distance is best measured in terms of number of grid points rather than physical distance. On the other hand, when comparing the results obtained for J8 with a grid mesh of 0.45° shown in Fig. 6 with those obtained for J24 with a grid mesh of 0.15° shown in Fig. 4 (note that the LBC resolutions are the same in these two cases), the physical distance of spin-up are the same.
The experimental results shown in Figs. 4, 5 and 6 suggests a parametric curve for the spatial variation of SS transient eddies of the form
where x is the distance from the lateral sponge zone (when expressed in terms of grid points, x \(=\) n\(\varDelta x_{RCM}\), where n is the number of grid points whithin the RCM domain), L is the e-folding distance on which the asymptotic value is reached (in terms of grid points, L \(=\) N\(\varDelta x_{R}\), where N is a e-folding distance in grid points ), and 0 \(\ge\) k \(\le\) 1 a parameter to account for possible overlap between the definition of the SS in the driving data and the RCM (k \(=\) 1 for no overlap and k \(=\) 0 for full overlap). Such form makes some intuitive sense: SS eddies that are absent in the LBC develop on the RCM high-resolution grid, as a result of various forcings (local physiographic, diabatic, nonlinear interactions, hydrodynamic instabilities, etc.), gradually increasing in amplitude towards their asymptotic value within the domain. The results presented in Figs. 4 and 5 covered several variations of RCM grid meshes (\(\varDelta x_{RCM}\)), LBC resolution (\(\varDelta x_{LBC}\)) and resolution jump (J \(=\) \(\frac{\varDelta x_{LBC}}{\varDelta x_{RCM}}\)). The following dependencies can be deducted from these results:
-
L increases with height in the troposphere; closer analysis revealed that L varies with the average wind speed V through the domain at the level of the variable that is analysed: L\(\,\propto\,\)V.
-
L varies with the shortest scale resolved by the LBC data: L\(\,\propto\,\)2\(\varDelta x_{LBC}\)
This suggests writing
When \(\varDelta x_{RCM}\) is held fixed and recalling the definition previously mentionned of L, Eq. (4) can be written as
where C is a constant with units of speed for dimensional consistency. The optimum fit with the experimental results led to the value C \(=\) 9 m s\(^{-1}\), which happens to correspond roughly to the typical displacement speed of synoptic-scale weather systems and to the ratio of their length and time scales (Orlanski 1975).
So, using Eq. (4), Eq. (3) becomes
while using Eq. (5), Eq. (3) than becomes
The optimum fit was obtained by setting the empirical constant k to 1 for J24 and J12, to 0.7 for J3 and to 0 for J1, to reflect the overlap in the definition of SS in the experiments as carried out. Eqs. (6) and (7) indicate that the adjustment distance is measured in terms of grid point numbers rather than physical distance when \(\varDelta x_{RCM}\) is held fixed and \(\varDelta x_{LBC}\) varies, while the adjustment distance is measured in terms of physical distance when \(\varDelta x_{LBC}\) is held fixed and \(\varDelta x_{RCM}\) varies. Those two equations are indicated by the dashed lines in Figs. 4, 5 and 6.
Figure 7 illustrates the equations and can serve as an abacus to evaluate the domain required to obtain the full development of the SS for a given set of available LBC and RCM resolution. The figure shows the values of the distance 3 L (right hand y-axis) and 3 N (solid black lines) required to attain 95 % of the asymptotic amplitude of SS. The left hand y-axis is the grid mesh of the LBC and the abscissa is the grid mesh of the RCM. Practitioners have to look at the intersection of the grid mesh of the LBC and the RCM of the wanted simulation to know the distance (in number of grid point or in physical distance, depending on the point of view) to correctly develop the small-scale features.
4 Conclusion
This study investigated the spatial spin-up distance as a function of the jump of resolution using the idealised Big-Brother protocol. A Big-Brother (BB) simulation was first performed with the CRCM5 on a 0.15° mesh over a very large domain over eastern North America, for two winter and two summer months of 4 years, driven by ERA-Interim reanalysis data. Then, this simulation was filtered to produce fields with a resolution equivalent to 3.6°, 1.8° and 0.45° meshes. The resulting dataset were used to drive a series of Little-Brother (LB) simulations, with a resolution jump of 24, 12 and 3, respectively, between the driving lateral boundary conditions and the LB mesh. An additional experiment with a jump of resolution of 1 was also made. Some limited experiments were also carried out with CRCM5 simulations on a 0.45° mesh.
Throughout this paper, the behaviour of small-scale transient eddies was studied using the relative vorticity field because this variable is typical of atmospheric variables that exhibit substantial small-scale amplitude, similar to vertical velocity or specific humidity, but unlike variables such as geopotential height whose spectrum is dominated by larger scales. It is worth noting that other variables have also been analysed but were not shown (such as meridional and zonal wind components, relative humidity), and conclusions remain the same. The 700-hPa level was chosen because it is close to the steering level of mid-latitude weather systems, near the level of non-divergence and maximum vertical velocity, and hence where precipitation is generated. In principle, this analysis could be extended to any variable and height of specific interest for some application of RCM simulations.
It has been shown that small-scale features take a large distance to develop within the simulated domain for large jump of resolution, particularly in winter and in the upper levels where the average flow through the domain is faster. It was found that the results could be summarized with a parametric equation describing the variation of the SS transient-eddy amplitude from the inflow boundary, and hence the spin-up distance.
Our initial preconception was that the spin-up distance would increase with the resolution jump between the LBC and the RCM resolutions. The results obtained with the idealised BBE have shown however that the spin-up distance that scales with the resolution jump is not the physical distance but rather the distance as measured in terms of RCM grid point numbers (see Eq. 7). For a given set of LBC, its resolution alone determines the spin-up physical distance, independently of the RCM resolution; hence when varying the RCM resolution for a given set of LBC, the number of RCM grid points over which SS approach their asymptotic value increases linearly with the resolution jump (see Eq. 6).
This parametric equation may be useful to RCM practitioners to determine an optimal domain to ensure the full development of the SS permitted by the resolution of the RCM used. The potentially trustworthy region of the RCM domain must exclude the spin-up region where fine scales have not yet reached their mature amplitude, thus shedding doubt on the simulated results in this region. Furthermore, RCM practitioners of the multiple nesting approach should also be aware of the location of the trustworthy region of each of their intermediate spatial-resolution simulation for an optimal used of this approach.
The fact that those results were provided from a 1-h nesting interval simulation might rise some questions about spatial spin-up at a more relaxed nesting interval. In fact, it can be demonstrated that the nesting time interval should be related to the resolution jump. For more detailed description, we referred the reader to the “Appendix”. A related point to also consider is the sensitivity to the width of the boundary relaxation zone. It is worth noting that this point has been assessed in another study, not reported in this paper. In essence the results have shown that the width of the blending zone has little effect upon the fine scales, its effect being felt mainly in the large scales that are better reproduced when expanding the blending zone.
Hence, in the interpretation of RCM simulations, it is important to take into account the small-scale spin-up region and exclude it from the analysis. In the last decade, several efforts have been made to foster high-resolution climate-change information through coordinated experiments such as CORDEX in which a strict simulation framework is imposed, including domain size and location. The results in this study suggest that the spatial spin-up should be taken into account in the design of the simulation framework and the ensuing analysis to avoid that spatial spin-up might contaminate results over the region of interest. Finally, further studies are needed for different domains location to validate the main conclusion of this study. However, the wind dependency of the empirical law suggests a strong relation between the weather regime and the small-scale development, which might give a good insight of how small scales are developed for other domains where the general weather regime is well known.
Change history
19 August 2017
An erratum to this article has been published.
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Acknowledgments
This research was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada. Computations were made on the supercomputer guillimin, managed by Calcul Québec and Compute Canada. The operation of this supercomputer is funded by the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), the Fonds de recherche du Québec—Nature et technologies (FRQNT), NanoQuébec, and the Réseau de médecine génétique appliquée (RMGA). D.M. thanks the FRQNT for a graduate fellowship. The authors are greatly indebted to Dr. Ramón de Elía for his constructive comments, to Dr. Bernard Dugas and Ms. Katja Winger for their essential help with the use of CRCM5, and to Mr. Georges Huard and Ms. Nadjet Labassi for maintaining user-friendly local computing facilities.
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An erratum to this article is available at https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-017-3825-4.
Appendix: Spatial spin-up and nesting interval
Appendix: Spatial spin-up and nesting interval
Figure 8 shows the same results as Fig. 4a, except that the nesting interval is extended to 6-hourly instead of hourly. To compare with the previous case, Eqs. (6) or (7) has also been used to draw the parametric curves computed in Fig. 8 for each Ji, showing clear differences with results when the nesting interval was set to 1 h. For the two larger jumps of resolution (i.e. J24 and J12), no difference is noted with respect to Fig. 4a. However, J3 and J1 struggle more to fulfill the \(\left( \frac{\sigma '_{Ji}}{\sigma '_{BB}}\right)\) deficit due to the excessively long nesting interval. This means that even when all scales are provided by the driving data, a excessively long nesting interval degrades the development of small-scale features, which has also been noted in previous studies (McDonald 2005, 2006; Termonia et al. 2009; Omrani et al. 2012). It will be demonstrated below that the nesting time interval should be related to the resolution jump.
Consider a weather disturbance in the nesting data used to provide the LBC to drive an RCM. For simplicity we will assume a sinusoidal shape in one dimension, with wavenumber \(\kappa =\frac{2\pi }{\lambda }\), wavelength \(\lambda\), moving at phase speed C:
In practice, the nesting data is only available at discrete time intervals \(t_n\), with n an integer, and hence it needs to be interpolated in time between nesting intervals \(\tau =t_{n+1}-t_n\) to drive the RCM at each time step. For most RCM applications, linear interpolation is used between nesting intervals to obtain values at intermediate times. Consider the interpolated value at the middle time between two nesting intervals:
Trigonometric identities give the result
Recognising the exact solution as \(A \hbox {sin} \kappa (x-C(t_n+\tau /2))\), the factor \(r=\hbox {cos}\kappa C\tau /2\) appears as the numerical response of the linear interpolation. This factor may be written as \(r=\hbox {cos}\pi \delta\)/\(\lambda\) where \(\delta =C\tau\) is the displacement distance of the disturbance in between two nesting time intervals. The interpolation provides an excellent approximation when \(\delta \ll \lambda\) (i.e. \(\tau \rightarrow 0\)) because factor \(r\rightarrow 1\) as expected; but the results degrade for larger displacement and in fact r \(=\) 0 for \(\delta /\lambda =1/2\). To obtain acceptable results, one should hence aim for values of \(f\equiv \delta / \lambda\) definitely smaller than a half. The shortest length scales for \(\lambda\) are limited by resolution of the nesting data. Considering that LBC are provided by a driving model with grid mesh \(\varDelta x_{LBC}\), then \(\lambda \ge N\varDelta x_{LBC}\) where \(2\le N\le 7\); N \(=\) 2 corresponds to the Nyquist cut-off and corresponds approximately to the shortest well resolved scales (e.g. Skamarock 2004). Consider a resolution jump J \(=\) \(\frac{\varDelta x_{LBC}}{\varDelta x_{RCM}}\) between the resolution of the driving data and the RCM, we can then write
or
for the largest acceptable nesting time interval. Using parameter values f \(=\) 1/5, N \(=\) 7, C \(=\) 30 km h\(^{-1}\) and \(\varDelta x_{RCM}=20\) km, we get \(\tau \approx J h\). This empirical equation confirms the results shown in Fig. 8 showing that, for an RCM with \(\varDelta x_{RCM}=20\) km, a nesting interval of 6 h is adequate for J equal to 12 and 24, but not for J equal to 1 and 3, in which case \(\tau =1h\) is adequate.
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Matte, D., Laprise, R., Thériault, J.M. et al. Spatial spin-up of fine scales in a regional climate model simulation driven by low-resolution boundary conditions. Clim Dyn 49, 563–574 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-016-3358-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-016-3358-2