Side note: one topic I’ve been reading about recently which is directly relevant to some of your examples (e.g. thunderstorms) is multiscale modelling. You might find it interesting.
Thanks, yes this is very relevant to thinking about climate modelling, with the dominant paradigm being that we can separately model phenomena above and below the resolved scale—there’s an ongoing debate, though, about whether a different approach would work better, and it gets tricky when the resolved scale gets close to the size of important types of weather system.
Side note: one topic I’ve been reading about recently which is directly relevant to some of your examples (e.g. thunderstorms) is multiscale modelling. You might find it interesting.
Thanks, yes this is very relevant to thinking about climate modelling, with the dominant paradigm being that we can separately model phenomena above and below the resolved scale—there’s an ongoing debate, though, about whether a different approach would work better, and it gets tricky when the resolved scale gets close to the size of important types of weather system.