• ISSN 2097-1893
    • CN 10-1855/P

    计算地球动力学在地球与行星内部过程研究中的进展与展望

    Progress and prospects of computational geodynamics in the study of Earth and planetary interior processes

    • 摘要: 计算地球动力学是地球动力学与计算科学交叉融合的前沿学科. 它依托高性能数值计算,致力于揭示地球与类地行星内部多尺度、跨圈层、复杂动力过程背后的机理,已成为该领域不可或缺的研究手段. 本文系统梳理了计算地球动力学的理论基础与核心数值方法,并重点探讨了其在地球内部动力学(包括多源观测约束的地幔对流、更真实物理过程的精细化建模、深部-地表跨圈层耦合以及早期地球动力学演化等方面)与类地行星内部过程(包括构造体制分异、内部结构、热演化、磁场生灭)等研究中的关键作用与进展. 最后,本文展望了该领域的未来发展趋势,涵盖数据同化的多观测联合约束与动力学自洽性、复杂物理过程的可检验性、长时间多尺度高分辨率模拟的算法创新,以及反演方法的发展. 本文旨在阐明计算地球动力学凭借其数值实验室的独特优势,推动地球与行星内部过程的认知向多物理过程耦合与多源数据驱动的更定量、更自洽、更系统的一体化方向迈进.

       

      Abstract: Computational geodynamics is an interdisciplinary frontier discipline integrating geodynamics and computational science. Relying on high-performance numerical computation, it endeavors to uncover the mechanisms behind multi-scale, cross-sphere, and complex dynamic processes inside the Earth and terrestrial planets, and has become an indispensable research method in this field. This paper comprehensively reviews the theoretical foundations and core numerical methods of computational geodynamics, and focuses on its key roles and advances in the research of geodynamic processes within the Earth and internal processes of terrestrial planets. In terms of geodynamics within the Earth, data assimilation techniques enable the reconstruction of four-dimensional mantle evolutionary sequences consistent with plate tectonic history and geological and geophysical observations; refined modeling of more realistic physical processes is gradually uncovering the deep-seated mechanisms underlying the formation, maintenance of plate boundaries and earthquake occurrence; cross-lithospheric coupling models have facilitated a systematic understanding of the complex interactions among various components of the Earth system; by applying the same set of physical laws to the early Earth, terrestrial planets and even exoplanetary super-Earths, we are gaining insights into the unique conditions required for the formation and evolution of the habitability of Earth—the only known cradle of life—within a more universal context. Finally, the paper prospects the future development trends in this discipline, covering the joint constraint of multiple observations and dynamic self-consistency in data assimilation, the testability of complex physical processes, algorithm innovation for long-term multi-scale high-resolution simulations, as well as the development of inversion methods. This paper aims to demonstrate that Computational Geodynamics, with its unique advantage as a numerical laboratory, is advancing the understanding of Earth and planetary interior processes toward a more quantitative, self-consistent, and systematic integration driven by multi-physics coupling and multi-source data.

       

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