Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Conforming quadrilaterals meshes on the cubed sphere.

Conference ·
OSTI ID:1028391
The cubed sphere geometry, obtained by inscribing a cube in a sphere and mapping points between the two surfaces using a gnomonic (central) projection, is commonly used in atmospheric models because it is free of polar singularities and is well-suited for parallel computing. Global meshes on the cubed-sphere typically project uniform (square) grids from each face of the cube onto the sphere, and if refinement is desired then it is done with non-conforming meshes - overlaying the area of interest with a finer uniform mesh, which introduces so-called hanging nodes on edges along the boundary of the fine resolution area. An alternate technique is to tile each face of the cube with quadrilaterals without requiring the quads to be rectangular. These meshes allow for refinement in areas of interest with a conforming mesh, providing a smoother transition between high and low resolution portions of the grid than non-conforming refinement. The conforming meshes are demonstrated in HOMME, NCAR's High Order Method Modeling Environment, where two modifications have been made: the dependence on uniform meshes has been removed, and the ability to read arbitrary quadrilateral meshes from a previously-generated file has been added. Numerical results come from a conservative spectral element method modeling a selection of the standard shallow water test cases.
Research Organization:
Sandia National Laboratories
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
DOE Contract Number:
AC04-94AL85000
OSTI ID:
1028391
Report Number(s):
SAND2010-5632C
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

Similar Records

A methodology for quadrilateral finite element mesh coarsening
Journal Article · Wed Mar 26 20:00:00 EDT 2008 · Engineering with Computers · OSTI ID:1426953

Conformal refinement of unstructured quadrilateral meshes
Conference · Wed Dec 31 23:00:00 EST 2008 · OSTI ID:989779

Toward a Non-Hydrostatic HOMME
Technical Report · Tue Aug 14 00:00:00 EDT 2012 · OSTI ID:1348890