Hamilton, K., 1996: Comprehensive meteorological modelling of the middle atmosphere: A tutorial review. Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, 58(14), 1591-1628.
Abstract: This paper reviews the current state of comprehensive,
three-dimensional, time-dependent modelling of the circulation in the middle
and upper atmosphere from a meteorologist's perspective. The paper begins
with a consideration of the various components of a comprehensive model
(or general circulation model, GCM), including treatments of processes
that can be explicitly resolved and those that occur on scales too small
to resolve (and that must be parameterized). The typical performance of
GCMs in simulating the tropospheric climate is discussed. Then some important
background on current ideas concerning the general circulation of the stratosphere
and mesosphere is presented. In particular, the transformed-Eulerian mean
flow formalism, the role of vertically-propagating internal gravity waves
in driving the large-scale circulation, and the notion of a stratospheric
surf zone are all briefly reviewed. Using this background as a guide, some
middle atmosphere GCM results are discussed, with a focus on simulations
made recently with the GFDL 'SKYHI' troposphere-stratosphere- mesosphere
GCM. The presentation attempts to emphasize the interaction between theory
and comprehensive modelling. Many theoretical notions cannot be confirmed
in detail from observations of the real atmosphere due to the various limitations
in the observational methods, but can be very completely examined in GCMs
in which every atmospheric variable is known perfectly (within the limits
of the numerical methods). It will be shown that our understanding of both
the role of gravity waves in the general circulation and the nature of
the stratospheric surf zonehas benefited from analysis of GCM results.
From the point of view of the upper atmosphere, one of the most interesting
aspects of GCMs is their ability to generate a self-consistent field of
upward-propagating gravity waves. This paper concludes with a discussion
of the gravity wave field in the middle atmosphere of GCMs. Comparisons
of the explicitly-resolved gravity wave field in the SKYHI model with observations
are quite encouraging, and it seems that the model is capable of producing
a gravity wave field with many realistic features. However, the simulated
horizontal spectrum of the eddy momentum fluxes associated with the waves
is quite shallow, suggesting that much of the spectrum that is important
for maintaining the mean circulation is not explicitly resolvable in current
GCMs. A brief discussion of current efforts at parameterizing the mean
flow effects of the unresolvable gravity waves is presented.