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NetCDF Climate and Forecast (CF) Metadata Conventions

NetCDF Climate and Forecast (CF) Metadata Conventions

NetCDF Climate and Forecast (CF) Metadata Conventions

Version 1.0, 28 October, 2003

Brian Eaton

NCAR

Jonathan Gregory

Hadley Centre, UK Met Office

Bob Drach

PCMDI, LLNL

Karl Taylor

PCMDI, LLNL

Steve Hankin

PMEL, NOAA

Abstract

This document describes the CF conventions for climate and forecast metadata designed to promote the processing and sharing of files created with the netCDF Application Programmer Interface [NetCDF]. The conventions define metadata that provide a definitive description of what the data in each variable represents, and of the spatial and temporal properties of the data. This enables users of data from different sources to decide which quantities are comparable, and facilitates building applications with powerful extraction, regridding, and display capabilities.

The CF conventions generalize and extend the COARDS conventions [COARDS]. The extensions include metadata that provides a precise definition of each variable via specification of a standard name, describes the vertical locations corresponding to dimensionless vertical coordinate values, and provides the spatial coordinates of non-rectilinear gridded data. Since climate and forecast data are often not simply representative of points in space/time, other extensions provide for the description of coordinate intervals, multidimensional cells and climatological time coordinates, and indicate how a data value is representative of an interval or cell. This standard also relaxes the COARDS constraints on dimension order and specifies methods for reducing the size of datasets.


List of Examples

3.1. Use of standard_name
3.2. Instrument data
3.3. A flag variable
4.1. Latitude axis
4.2. Longitude axis
4.3. Atmosphere sigma coordinate
4.4. Time axis
4.5. Perpetual time axis
4.6. Paleoclimate time axis
5.1. Independent coordinate variables
5.2. Two-dimensional coordinate variables
5.3. Reduced horizontal grid
5.4. Timeseries of station data
5.5. Trajectories
5.6. Rotated pole grid
5.7. Lambert conformal projection
5.8. Multiple forecasts from a single analysis
6.1. Several parcel trajectories
6.2. Northward heat transport in Atlantic Ocean
6.3. Model level numbers
7.1. Cells on a latitude axis
7.2. Cells in a non-rectangular grid
7.3. Cell areas for a spherical geodesic grid
7.4. Methods applied to a timeseries
7.5. Surface air temperature variance
7.6. Climatological seasons
7.7. Decadal averages for January
7.8. Temperature for each hour of the average day
7.9. Temperature for each hour of the typical climatological day
7.10. Monthly-maximum daily precipitation totals
8.1. Horizontal compression of a three-dimensional array
8.2. Compression of a three-dimensional field
B.1. A name table containing three entries
D.1. Atmosphere natural log pressure coordinate
D.2. Atmosphere sigma coordinate
D.3. Atmosphere hybrid sigma pressure coordinate
D.4. Atmosphere hybrid height coordinate
D.5. Atmosphere smooth level vertical (SLEVE) coordinate
D.6. Ocean sigma coordinate
D.7. Ocean s-coordinate
D.8. Ocean sigma over z coordinate
D.9. Ocean double sigma coordinate
F.1. Albers Equal Area
F.2. Azimuthal equidistant
F.3. Lambert azimuthal equal area
F.4. Lambert conformal
F.5. Polar stereographic
F.6. Rotated pole
F.7. Stereographic
F.8. Transverse Mercator

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