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The NCAR Single-column Community Atmosphere Model



What is SCAM2?

The SCAM is a one-dimensional time-dependent version of the NCAR Community Atmosphere Model, often referred to as a Single Column Model (SCM). A single column model will predict the local time-rate-of-change of the large-scale state variables (e.g., temperature, moisture, momentum, cloud water, etc.) using specified horizontal flux divergences, a specified vertical motion field (from which the large-scale vertical advection terms are evaluated), and subgrid-scale sources, sinks and eddy transports. The subgrid-scale contributions are determined by an arbitrary collection of user-selected subgrid-scale physics parameterizations.

SCAM-2 is the latest version of the NCAR Single Column Model based on its 3D global climate
model CAM2.  Previous versions of the single column model based on older releases of the global model are no longer being maintained although they can still be downloaded from  www.cgd.ucar.edu/cms/sccm/sccm.html.

This software distribution will build a single column version of the CAM2.0 model released on May 17, 2002.  The single column framework was redesigned to use much of the original CAM2 code and data structures as possible.  Therefore all physics parameterizations and surface components are identical in coding structure to their respective counterparts in the 3D global model making it trivial to migrate components between the two modeling frameworks.

The overall design includes the provision of a graphical user interface (GUI) to the model.  The point-and-click graphical interface streamlines the control of code flow including: dataset selection; column location (latitude/longitude) selection; modification of control variables (such as termination conditions, update frequencies, specification of history data, etc.); modification of initial data and the associated large-scale forcing (e.g., modification of vertical structures, amplitudes, etc.); and the visualization of output data (vertical profiles, time series, etc.). In particular, we have emphasized a tight coupling of interactive graphical analysis capabilities with the integration component of the model.  Presently only Eulerian vertical advection capabilities have been incorporated into the modeling framework.

Like its 3D counterpart SCAM-2 uses many of the same netCDF formatted boundary datasets. In addition to using CAM2-generated initial and boundary condition datasets the modeling framework has been constructed to incorporate data (e.g., initial conditions and forcing terms) as diagnosed from various field experiments. The current standard "library" of field program forcing/budget data includes GATE, TOGA COARE, and ARM IOP datasets. These initial condition and forcing data are dynamically specifiable from the GUI, as are global initial conditions and steady-state vertical motion forcing data from ECMWF analyses and CCM climate integrations. The IOP data serves a dual role by providing the necessary boundary forcing for the one-dimensional model, and providing validation data for the time-dependent solutions generated by the collection of physical parameterizations which are being evaluated.

This modeling framework has been under development for several years, with support from the Computer Hardware Advanced Mathematics Model Physics (CHAMMP) Program, currently known as the Climate Change Prediction Program (CCPP), which is administered by the Office of Energy Research under the Office of Health and Environmental Research in the Department of Energy Environmental Sciences Division. During this development period we have been systematically evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of an SCM approach (a manuscript is in preparation). Despite certain limitations, it has proven to be an economical numerical experimentation environment for facilitating the investigation and improvement of parameterizations of radiative and moist processes in atmospheric general circulation models. We believe that the current code distribution is sufficiently stable so that the community will be able to build and execute the code in any of the common UNIX environments to which is has been ported:  currently supported systems are Sun/Solaris, IBM RS6000/AIX, SGI/IRIX64,  and Intel PC/Linux. in the near future.

The code is an UNSUPPORTED contribution to the university modeling community, although we do wish to receive feedback on any problems users may encounter (scam@ucar.edu). Users are strongly encouraged to register their use of SCAM so that they may automatically receive notification of program updates, new dataset availability, etc.  Users may register by sending email to scam@ucar.edu with the subject "registration."


!!! Bulletins !!!


Known Problems and Bugs

Release History

SCAM Source Code, GUI, and Dataset Distribution

The graphical user interface (GUI) is only available as a precompiled binary so you must download the correct version for your system and compiler. This distribution contains all of the datasets required to run SCAM, including three basic IOP datasets from GATE, TOGA, and ARM observations.


IOP Dataset Descriptions

The following is a description of the datasets included in the scam distribution.

ARM

GATE
TOGA

Patches

There are none at this time.


Related Sites

NCAR Community Climate Models

CAM2

NCAR Home Page

NCAR/CMS Home Page

TOGA COARE Home Page

GATE

ARM SCM Intercomparison Home Page

Single Column Modeling Home Page

Send email to:

 scam@ucar.edu

 
 
 
 
 
 

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Page last modified February 4, 2003