Hi all, please keep discussions on list to spread the support load and ensure everyone has the chance to learn from the answers. Regards, David On Sun, 2 Apr 2017 at 15:58, Shipton, Jemma <j.shipton@imperial.ac.uk> wrote:
Hi Joy,
Yes, sorry, I'm afraid that there isn't much documentation on Gusto at the moment - I hope to write some soon.
We don't have a straightforward way to interact with "physics" just yet, although we are working on implementing moist physics.
I'll email you off-list to chat more about what you need...
Thanks!
Jemma ------------------------------ *From:* firedrake-bounces@imperial.ac.uk <firedrake-bounces@imperial.ac.uk> on behalf of Joy merwin monteiro <joy.merwin@gmail.com> *Sent:* 02 April 2017 15:44:21 *To:* firedrake *Subject:* [firedrake] Interacting with Gusto
Hello,
I have recently heard about Firedrake and Gusto, and am looking forward to using it!
I am working on a project named climt ( http://climt.readthedocs.io/en/latest/readme.html), and I was wondering whether I could get Gusto/Firedrake to work with the components already available there.
my question was what interface does Gusto provide for interaction with "physics", like say, a radiative transfer code?
In other words, is there a straightforward way to access model arrays, calculate physics tendencies, and provide them back to the dynamical core?
I tried to look for more documentation about Gusto, but could not find any. I would be grateful if you could point me in the right direction.
TIA, Joy
-- The best ruler, when he finishes his tasks and completes his affairs, the people say “It all happened naturally”
- Te Tao Ch'ing
-- Dr David Ham Department of Mathematics Imperial College London