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Investigations of scalar transfer coefficients in fog during the Coupled Boundary Layers and Air Sea Transfer Experiment : a case studyCrofoot, Robert F. 09 1900 (has links)
The uncertainty in the determination of the momentum and scalar fluxes remains one of the main obstacles to accurate numerical forecasts in low to moderate wind conditions. For example, latent heat fluxes computed from data using direct covariance and bulk aerodynamic methods show that there is good agreement in unstable conditions when the latent heat flux values are generally positive. However, the agreement is relatively poor in stable conditions, particularly when the moisture flux is directed downward. If the direct covariance measurements are indeed accurate, then they clearly indicate that the bulk aerodynamic formula overestimate the downward moisture flux in stable conditions. As a result, comparisons of the Dalton number for unstable and stable conditions indicate a marked difference in value between the two stability regimes. Investigations done for this thesis used data taken primarily at the Air-Sea Interaction Tower (ASIT) during the Coupled Boundary Layers and Air-Sea Transfer (CBLAST) Experiment 2003 from the 20-27 August 2003. Other data from the shore based Martha's Vineyard Coastal Observatory (MVCO) and moored buoys in the vicinity of the ASIT were also incorporated. During this eight day period, the boundary layer was often characterized by light winds, a stably stratified surface layer and a swell dominated wave field. Additionally, the advection of warm moist air over cooler water resulted in fog formation and a downward flux of moisture on at least three occasions. Therefore, a primary objective of this thesis is to present a case study to investigate the cause of this shortcoming in the bulk formula under these conditions by examining the physical processes that are unique to these boundary layers. Particular attention will be paid to the behavior of the Dalton number in a stable marine atmospheric boundary layer under foggy conditions using insights derived from the study of fog formation and current flux parameterization methods.
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Seasonal variability and the relationship between dissolved inorganic nutrients and selected environmental parameters inshore and offshore of St. Helena BayIsmail, Hassan Ebrahiem January 2017 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Chemistry))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2017. / The purpose of the present study was to apply data collected monthly over a 6-year period along the almost 200 km long St. Helena Bay Monitoring Line in the Southern Benguela upwelling system to investigate co-variation between an upwelling index calculated from nearby wind records and physical and chemical properties along the transect. The extent to which the well-documented seasonal upwelling cycles is manifested at the surface along an inshore-offshore variation was investigated in the context of implications for the validity of remote sensing as a monitoring tool in this ocean area and to improve understanding of the physical drivers of biological processes in St. Helena Bay. This study shows that surface temperature and nutrient concentrations exhibit very poor seasonality and weak correlation with the upwelling index. This is, despite clear evidence for spatial inshore-offshore gradients in temperature, nutrients, and chlorophyll-a, consistent with an upwelling regime. The upper ocean temperature gradient shows a much better correspondence to the upwelling index but at the same time demonstrates that surface heating, and not vertical mixing related to upwelling, controls the upper ocean temperature gradient.
In this study linear lagged correlations were also examined and discussed to gain insight into the effect upwelling has on the surface waters in St. Helena Bay with the view of determining the following: (1) Does upwelling lead to an increase or decrease of the water properties? (2) What is the characteristic lag between an upwelling event and its effect on these water properties? (3) Is the effect and/or lag different for the different seasons? and (4) Is the effect and/or lag different for stations inside the bay and those outside the bay?. A combination of surface turbulent cooling through upwelling occurred after a lag of 8 to 10 days in winter and early summer, but less than half in late summer, similar to results obtained with salinity. However, the rest of the salinity results fit in poorly with the temperature results. The only significant correlation obtained with the inshore stations during late summer is the inexplicable positive correlation at a lag of 7 days. For all three seasons virtually none of the oxygen results fit the expected pattern. All three nutrients showed a more positive correlation coefficient and significance than the negative ones. Significant negative correlations occurred mainly during late summer at lags of 7 to 9 days caused by planktonic depletion of nutrients. Also, in this season, significant positive correlations between south-north wind and nutrients only occurred at short lags. This observation supports the earlier temperature-based conclusion that the influence of upwelling develops most rapidly at this time of the year. A rapid increase in chlorophyll-a levels followed by nutrient enrichment of the surface layers are evident.
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The results suggest that remote sensing techniques would be inadequate tools to monitor upwelling events in the Southern Benguela. Secondly, the incidence of phytoplankton blooms is more likely triggered by stratified conditions associated with surface heating than relaxation of upwelling winds. Finally, these results also emphasise the importance of validating lagged outputs against real-time measurements in supporting a simpler hydrological model in narrowing down these significant uncertainties.
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Wave breaking at high wind speeds and its effects on air-sea gas transferBrumer, Sophia Eleonora January 2017 (has links)
Gravity waves are ubiquitous at the surface of the ocean and play a key role in the coupled ocean-atmosphere system. These wind generated waves, for which gravity provides the restoring force, influence the kinematics and dynamics of the upper ocean and lower atmosphere. Their breaking injects turbulence into the upper ocean, generates bubble plumes and sea-spray thus transferring energy, momentum, heat and mass between the atmosphere and the ocean. In the anthropocene, with CO2 driving the warming trend and the ocean acting as the main carbon sink, it is imperative to understand the complex physical controls of air-sea gas transfer. Large uncertainties still remain under high wind speed conditions where wave breaking processes are dominant. This dissertation seeks to shed light onto the dependence of wave breaking and air-sea gas transfer on environmental parameters. It further explores process based models of air-sea gas transfer that explicitly account for the breaking related processes.
Air entraining breaking waves are easily detectable as bright features on the ocean surface composed of foam and subsurface bubble plumes. These features, termed whitecaps, arise at wind speed as as low as 3 m s−1 . The whitecap coverage (W) has been recognized as a useful proxy for quantifying wave breaking related processes. It can be determined from shipboard, air-borne and satellite remote sensing. W is most commonly parameterized as a function of wind speed, but previous parameterizations display over three orders of magnitude scatter. Concurrent wave field and flux measurements acquired during the Southern Ocean Gas Exchange (SO GasEx) and the High Wind Gas exchange Study (HiWinGS) projects permitted evaluation of the dependence of W on wind speed, wave age, wave steepness, mean square slope, as well as on wave-wind and breaking Reynolds numbers. W was determined from over 600 high frequency visible imagery recordings of 20 minutes each. Wave statistics were computed from in situ and remotely sensed data as well as from a WAVEWATCH-III® hind cast. The first ship-borne estimates of W under sustained wind speeds (U10N ) of 25 m s−1 were obtained during HiWinGS. These measurements suggest that W levels off at high wind speed, not exceeding 10% when averaged over 20 minutes. Combining wind speed and wave height in the form of the wave-wind Reynolds number resulted in closely agreeing models for both datasets, individually and combined. These are also in good agreement with two previous studies. When expressing W in terms of wave field statistics only or wave age, larger scatter is observed and/or there is little agreement between SO GasEx, HiWinGS, and previously published data. The wind–speed-only parameterizations deduced from the SO GasEx and HiWinGS datasets agree closely and capture more of the observed W variability than Reynolds number parameterizations. However, these wind-speed-only models do not agree as well with previous studies than the wind-wave Reynolds numbers.
The ability to quantify air-sea gas transfer hinges on parameterizations of the gas transfer velocity k. k represents physical mass transfer mechanisms and is usually parameterized as a non-linear function of wind forcing. Previous eddy-covariance measurements and models based on the global radio carbon inventory led to diverging parameterizations with both cubic and quadratic wind speed dependence. At wind speeds above 10 m s−1 these parameterizations differ considerably and measurements display large scatter. In an attempt to reduce uncertainties in k, explored empirical parameterizations that incorporate both wind speed and sea state dependence via breaking and wave-wind Reynolds numbers, were explored. Analysis of concurrent eddy covariance gas transfer and measured wave field statistics supplemented by wave model hindcasts shows for the first time that wave-related Reynold numbers collapse four open ocean datasets that have a wind speed dependence of CO2 transfer velocity ranging from lower than quadratic to cubic. Wave-related Reynolds number and wind speed show comparable performance for parametrizing DMS which, because of its higher solubility, is less affected by bubble-mediated exchange associated with wave breaking.
While single parameter models may be readily used in climate studies, their application is gas specific and may be limited to select environments. Physically based parameterizations that incorporate multiple forcing factors allow to model the gas transfer of gases with differing solubility for a wide range of environmental conditions. Existing mechanistic models were tested and a novel framework to model gas transfer in the open ocean in the presence of breaking waves is put forward. This analysis allowed to update NOAA’s Coupled OceanAtmosphere Response Experiment Gas transfer algorithm (COAREG) and exposed limitation of other existing physically based parameterizations. The newly proposed mechanistic model incorporates both the turbulence and bubble mediated transfer. It is based on various statistics determined from the breaking crest length distribution (Λ(c)). Λ(c) was obtained by tracking the advancing front of breaking waves in the high frequency videos taken during HiWinGS. Testing the mechanistic model with the HiWinGS dataset shows promising results for both CO2 and DMS, though it does not perform better than COAREG. Uncertainties remain in the quantification of bubble cloud which are at the core of the formulation of the bubble mediated transfer and additional field measurements are necessary to characterize bubble plume properties in the open ocean.
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Towards an improved understanding of deep convection patterns over the tropical oceans /Back, Larissa. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2007. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 105-110).
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Atmospheric interactions with Gulf Stream rings /Dewar, William K. January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1983. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 226-229).
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The ocean-air exchange of carbonyl sulfide (OCS) and halocarbons /Hoyt, Steven D. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Oregon Graduate Center, 1982.
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The seasonal footprinting mechanism in the CSIRO coupled general circulation models and in observations /Vimont, Daniel J. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 73-82).
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Investigations of scalar transfer coefficients in fog during the Coupled Boundary Layers and Air Sea Transfer Experiment : a case study /Crofoot, Robert F. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Joint Program in Oceanography/ Applied Ocean Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 70-72).
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Ice-atmosphere interactions in the Canadian high arctic : implications for the thermo-mechanical evolution of terrestrial ice masses /Wohlleben, Trudy M. H. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Alberta, 2009. / A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Dept. of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta. Includes bibliographical references. Also available via the Internet.
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Applications of neon, nitrogen, argon, and oxygen to physical, chemical, and biological cycles in the ocean /Hamme, Roberta Claire. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 109-117).
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