Abstract
Attempts to use machine learning to develop atmospheric parameterizations have mainly focused on subgrid effects on temperature and moisture, but subgrid momentum transport is also important in simulations of the atmospheric circulation. Here, we use neural networks to develop a subgrid momentum transport parameterization that learns from coarse‐grained output of a high‐resolution atmospheric simulation in an idealized aquaplanet domain. We show that substantial subgrid momentum transport occurs due to convection. The neural‐network parameterization has skill in predicting momentum fluxes associated with convection, although its skill for subgrid momentum fluxes is lower compared to subgrid energy and moisture fluxes. The parameterization conserves momentum, and when implemented in the same atmospheric model at coarse resolution it leads to stable simulations and tends to reduce wind biases, although it over‐corrects for one configuration tested. Overall, our results show that it is challenging to predict subgrid momentum fluxes and that machine‐learning momentum parameterization gives promising results.
Journal
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
Citation
Yuval, J., & O’Gorman, P. A. (2023). Neural-network parameterization of subgrid momentum transport in the atmosphere. Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, 15, e2023MS003606.
Version: Final published version