WiSe 21/22: Mathematical Modelling in Climate Research
Rupert Klein
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Content:
Mathematics plays a central role in the development and analysis of models for weather and climate prediction. Controlled physical experiments are out of the question, so that the only way we can study Earth’s weather and climate is through mathematical models, computational experiments, and data analysis.
Fluctuations in daily weather are tightly connected to turbulence, and turbulence represents a challenge for the predictability of weather. No general solution for the equations of fluid motion is known, and specifically no general solutions to flow problems involving turbulence are available. Instead, scientists rely on conceptual models, complex computer simnulations, and advanced statistics and time series analysis to understand the essence of the daily weather and how it feeds back onto the climate.
This course/seminar focuses on techniques of mathematical modeling that assist scientists in exploring the listed issues systematically.
The course will cover a selection from the following topics
1. Conservation laws and governing equations,
2. Numerical methods for geophysical flow simulations,
3. Dynamical systems and bifurcation theory,
4. Data-based characterization of atmospheric flows
closeSuggested reading
Tennekes and Lumley, A first course in Turbulence, MIT Press (1974)
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15 Class schedule
Regular appointments
Content:
Mathematics plays a central role in the development and analysis of models for weather and climate prediction. Controlled physical experiments are out of the question, so that the ... read more