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Large-Scale Atmosphere-Ocean Dynamics
The lectures in this volume, first published in 2002, cover numerical weather prediction, chaotic atmospheric dynamics, atmospheric modelling.
John Norbury (Edited by), Ian Roulstone (Edited by)
9780521807579, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 15 August 2002
396 pages
24.4 x 17 x 2.2 cm, 0.83 kg
Numerical weather prediction is a problem of mathematical physics. The complex flows in the atmosphere and oceans are believed to be accurately modelled by the Navier-Stokes equations of fluid mechanics together with classical thermodynamics. However, due to the enormous complexity of these equations, meteorologists and oceanographers have constructed approximate models of the dominant, large-scale flows that control the evolution of weather systems and that describe, for example, the dynamics of cyclones and ocean eddies. The simplifications often result in models that are amenable to solution both analytically and numerically. The lectures in this volume, first published in 2002, examine and explain why such simplifications to Newton's second law produce accurate, useful models and, just as the meteorologist seeks patterns in the weather, mathematicians seek structure in the governing equations, such as groups of transformations, Hamiltonian structure and stability. This book and its companion show how geometry and analysis facilitate solution strategies.
Introduction J. C. R. Hunt, J. Norbury and I. Roulstone
1. Balanced models in geophysical fluid dynamics: Hamiltonian formulation, constraints and formal stability O. Bokhove
2. The swinging spring: a simple model of atmospheric balance P. Lynch
3. On the stationary spectra for an ensemble of plane weakly nonlinear internal gravity waves P. Caillol and V. Zeitlin
4. Hamiltonian description of shear flow N. J. Balmforth and P. J. Morrison
5. Some applications of transformation theory in mechanics M. J. Sewell
6. Legendre-transformable semi-geostrophic theories R. J. Purser
7. The Euler-Poincaré equations in geophysical fluid dynamics D. D. Holm, J. E. Marsden and T. Ratiu
8. Are there higher-accuracy analogues of semi-geostrophic theory? M. E. McIntyre and I. Roulstone.
Subject Areas: Meteorology & climatology [RBP], Oceanography [seas RBKC], Fluid mechanics [PHDF]
