Adding a Depth Coordinate¶
Adding a 1D depth coordinate¶
The function mpas_tools.ocean.depth.add_depth()
can be used to add
a 1D depth
coordinate that is appropriate for runs with a z-star MPAS-Ocean
mesh. The coordinate is only approximately correct but is useful for
visualization.
Internally, the depth is computed with
mpas_tools.ocean.depth.compute_depth()
, which could also be called
directly if one has a suitable refBottomDepth
data array indicating the
reference depth of the bottom of each layer in a 1D coordinate that is
independent of both time and horizontal coordinate.
Adding a 3D zMid coordinate¶
The function mpas_tools.ocean.depth.add_zmid()
can be used to add
a time-independent, 3D zMid
coordinate that is appropriate for runs with
any MPAS-Ocean vertical coordinate that is not a significant function of time.
This is appropriate for both z-star simulations and those with ice-shelf
cavities, which have a more complex vertical coordinate. The coordinate is only
approximately correct because MPAS-Ocean coordinates vary at least slightly
in time (with the undulation of the sea surface). The time-independent zMid
is appropriate for visualization an analysis that does not need to account for
this time variability.
Internally, the zMid
is computed with
mpas_tools.ocean.depth.compute_zmid()
, which could also be called
directly if one has a suitable bottomDepth
, maxLevelCell
,
and (reference) layerThickness
data arrays.
Writing a time-dependent, 3D zMid variable¶
The function mpas_tools.ocean.depth.write_time_varying_zmid()
can be
used to write out a time-dependent, 3D zMid
variable to its own file.
This is the “true” MPAS-Ocean vertical coordinate, in contrast to the 1D and
3D time-independent coordinates mentioned above. However, it requires a
significant amount of disk space so may not be desirable in many contexts.
Internally, the <prefix>zMid
is computed with
mpas_tools.ocean.depth.compute_zmid()
using the time-dependent
<prefix>layerThickness
variable, where <prefix>
is a prefix such as
'timeMonthly_avg_'
or an empty string (''
) for no prefix.