Sometimes the user input to SWAN is such that SWAN produces unreliable and sometimes even unrealistic results. This may be the case if the bathymetry or the wave field is not well resolved. Be aware here that the grid on which the computations are performed interpolates from the grids on which the input is provided; different resolutions for these grids (which are allowed) can therefore create unexpected interpolation patterns on the computational grid. In such cases SWAN may invoke some internal scenarios or limiters instead of terminating the computations. The reasons for this model policy is that
Examples are:
 ).
        See command NUMERIC. This may be relevant when the depth varies considerably
        over one spatial grid step (e.g. at the edge of oceans or near oceanic islands with only
        one or two grid steps to go from oceanic depths to a shallow coast). This implies
        inaccurate refraction computations in such grid steps. This may be acceptable when
        refraction has only local effects that can be ignored but, depending on the topography,
        the inaccurately computed effects may radiate far into the computational area.
).
        See command NUMERIC. This may be relevant when the depth varies considerably
        over one spatial grid step (e.g. at the edge of oceans or near oceanic islands with only
        one or two grid steps to go from oceanic depths to a shallow coast). This implies
        inaccurate refraction computations in such grid steps. This may be acceptable when
        refraction has only local effects that can be ignored but, depending on the topography,
        the inaccurately computed effects may radiate far into the computational area.
| ad 1 | For spatial propagation the change of the wave field over one iteration is
                       limited to some realistic value (usually several iterations for stationary
                       conditions or one iteration or upgrade per time step for nonstationary
                       conditions; see command NUMERIC). This is a common problem for all
                       third-generation wave models (such as WAM, WAVEWATCH III and also SWAN). It
                       does not seem to affect the result seriously in many cases but sometimes
                       SWAN fails to converge properly. For curvilinear grids, convergence problems may occur locally where in some points in the grid, the directions separating the 4 sweeping quadrants coincide with the given spectral directions. | 
| ad 2 | For spectral propagation (but only current-induced refraction and frequency shift) SWAN may also not converge. | 
| ad 3 | For the wave-induced set-up SWAN may also not converge. | 
The SWAN team 2024-09-09