Review
Version 2
Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed
Modeling and Simulation of Tsunami Impact. a Short Review of Recent Advances and Future Challenges
Version 1
: Received: 16 October 2020 / Approved: 19 October 2020 / Online: 19 October 2020 (15:50:05 CEST)
Version 2 : Received: 17 December 2020 / Approved: 18 December 2020 / Online: 18 December 2020 (12:01:05 CET)
Version 2 : Received: 17 December 2020 / Approved: 18 December 2020 / Online: 18 December 2020 (12:01:05 CET)
A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.
Marras, S.; Mandli, K.T. Modeling and Simulation of Tsunami Impact: A Short Review of Recent Advances and Future Challenges. Geosciences 2021, 11, 5. Marras, S.; Mandli, K.T. Modeling and Simulation of Tsunami Impact: A Short Review of Recent Advances and Future Challenges. Geosciences 2021, 11, 5.
Abstract
Tsunami modeling and simulation has changed in the past few years more than it had in decades, especially so with respect to coastal inundation. Among other things, this change is supported by the approaching era of exa-scale computing, whether via GPU or more likely forms of hybrid computing whose presence is growing across the geosciences. For reasons identified across this review, exa-scale computing efforts will impact the on-shore, highly turbulent r\'egime to higher degree than the 2D shallow water equations used to model tsunami propagation in the open ocean. This short review describes the different approaches to tsunami modeling from generation to impact and underlines the limits of each model based on the flow r\'egime. Moreover, from the perspective of a future comprehensive multi-scale modeling infrastructure to simulate a full tsunami, we underline the current challenges associated with this approach and review the few efforts that are currently underway to achieve this goal. A table of existing tsunami software packages is provided along with an open Github repository to allow developers and model users to update the table with additional models as they are published and help with model discoverability.
Keywords
Tsunami Modeling; Tsunami Simulations; Numerical Methods
Subject
Environmental and Earth Sciences, Atmospheric Science and Meteorology
Copyright: This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Commenter: Simone Marras
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