Optical Measurements of Whitecaps and Bubbles During Large Scale Wave Breaking in the Southern Ocean

Wave breaking contributes to climate relevant processes, such as the production of sea salt aerosols and the exchange of gas (e.g. CO2, CH4, DMS, water vapor) and heat between the ocean and atmosphere. Quantifying these processes, however, has been hampered by the lack of field data under high wind...

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Other Authors: Randolph, Kaylan L. (Creator), Dierssen, Heidi M. (Major Advisor), Twardowski, Michael S. (Associate Advisor), Monahan, Edward C. (Associate Advisor), Edson, James B. (Associate Advisor), University of Connecticut (Degree grantor)
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Connecticut 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11134/20002:860649972
https://digitalcollections.ctstatelibrary.org/islandora/object/20002%3A860649972/datastream/TN/view/Optical%20Measurements%20of%20Whitecaps%20and%20Bubbles%20During%20Large%20Scale%20Wave%20Breaking%20in%20the%20Southern%20Ocean.jpg
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spelling ftconnecticstlib:oai:oai:collections.ctdigitalarchive.org:20002_860649972 2023-05-15T18:25:16+02:00 Optical Measurements of Whitecaps and Bubbles During Large Scale Wave Breaking in the Southern Ocean Randolph, Kaylan L. (Creator) Dierssen, Heidi M. (Major Advisor) Twardowski, Michael S. (Associate Advisor) Monahan, Edward C. (Associate Advisor) Edson, James B. (Associate Advisor) University of Connecticut (Degree grantor) 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11134/20002:860649972 https://digitalcollections.ctstatelibrary.org/islandora/object/20002%3A860649972/datastream/TN/view/Optical%20Measurements%20of%20Whitecaps%20and%20Bubbles%20During%20Large%20Scale%20Wave%20Breaking%20in%20the%20Southern%20Ocean.jpg unknown University of Connecticut In Copyright These materials are provided for educational and research purposes only. Text doctoral dissertation 2015 ftconnecticstlib 2022-07-31T19:15:28Z Wave breaking contributes to climate relevant processes, such as the production of sea salt aerosols and the exchange of gas (e.g. CO2, CH4, DMS, water vapor) and heat between the ocean and atmosphere. Quantifying these processes, however, has been hampered by the lack of field data under high wind conditions and the inherent challenges in measuring whitecaps. Here, optical tools were developed to estimate metrics of whitecaps and bubbles associated with wave breaking along the polar front zone of the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. In this study, wind speeds exceeded 15 m s-1, significant wave heights routinely surpassed 4 m, fractional whitecap coverage exceeded 5%, and bubble plumes penetrated to over 10 m depth in the water column. With a single channel above-water radiometer mounted on a ship, metrics were developed to quantify wave breaking intensity, duration and decay rate, and fractional whitecap coverage. Radiometric estimates of whitecap coverage followed a cubic dependence with wind speed and captured more of the decaying bubble plume area than methods using high-resolution digital imagery. Optical measurements of the near forward volume scattering function and the critical scattering angle for bubbles (~80°) were used to detect deeply penetrating bubbles ranging from 0.5 to 125 μm radius. When extrapolated to 4 m depth, our estimates suggest that the small bubbles here could be supplying ~36% of the total void fraction and likely contributed to the supersaturation of low solubility gases. Finally, preliminary results from a least-squares inversion technique applied to measurements of the bulk optical volume scattering function suggest that a persistent, small (mode radius~0.2 μm) bubble population with a narrow size distribution contributed between 5% (low wind) and 20% (high wind) to the total backscattering during the experiment. Under high wind conditions, foam and bubbles serve to enhance the magnitude and alter the spectral distribution of light leaving the surface ocean, which can ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Southern Ocean Connecticut Digital Archive Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection Connecticut Digital Archive
op_collection_id ftconnecticstlib
language unknown
description Wave breaking contributes to climate relevant processes, such as the production of sea salt aerosols and the exchange of gas (e.g. CO2, CH4, DMS, water vapor) and heat between the ocean and atmosphere. Quantifying these processes, however, has been hampered by the lack of field data under high wind conditions and the inherent challenges in measuring whitecaps. Here, optical tools were developed to estimate metrics of whitecaps and bubbles associated with wave breaking along the polar front zone of the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. In this study, wind speeds exceeded 15 m s-1, significant wave heights routinely surpassed 4 m, fractional whitecap coverage exceeded 5%, and bubble plumes penetrated to over 10 m depth in the water column. With a single channel above-water radiometer mounted on a ship, metrics were developed to quantify wave breaking intensity, duration and decay rate, and fractional whitecap coverage. Radiometric estimates of whitecap coverage followed a cubic dependence with wind speed and captured more of the decaying bubble plume area than methods using high-resolution digital imagery. Optical measurements of the near forward volume scattering function and the critical scattering angle for bubbles (~80°) were used to detect deeply penetrating bubbles ranging from 0.5 to 125 μm radius. When extrapolated to 4 m depth, our estimates suggest that the small bubbles here could be supplying ~36% of the total void fraction and likely contributed to the supersaturation of low solubility gases. Finally, preliminary results from a least-squares inversion technique applied to measurements of the bulk optical volume scattering function suggest that a persistent, small (mode radius~0.2 μm) bubble population with a narrow size distribution contributed between 5% (low wind) and 20% (high wind) to the total backscattering during the experiment. Under high wind conditions, foam and bubbles serve to enhance the magnitude and alter the spectral distribution of light leaving the surface ocean, which can ...
author2 Randolph, Kaylan L. (Creator)
Dierssen, Heidi M. (Major Advisor)
Twardowski, Michael S. (Associate Advisor)
Monahan, Edward C. (Associate Advisor)
Edson, James B. (Associate Advisor)
University of Connecticut (Degree grantor)
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
title Optical Measurements of Whitecaps and Bubbles During Large Scale Wave Breaking in the Southern Ocean
spellingShingle Optical Measurements of Whitecaps and Bubbles During Large Scale Wave Breaking in the Southern Ocean
title_short Optical Measurements of Whitecaps and Bubbles During Large Scale Wave Breaking in the Southern Ocean
title_full Optical Measurements of Whitecaps and Bubbles During Large Scale Wave Breaking in the Southern Ocean
title_fullStr Optical Measurements of Whitecaps and Bubbles During Large Scale Wave Breaking in the Southern Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Optical Measurements of Whitecaps and Bubbles During Large Scale Wave Breaking in the Southern Ocean
title_sort optical measurements of whitecaps and bubbles during large scale wave breaking in the southern ocean
publisher University of Connecticut
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11134/20002:860649972
https://digitalcollections.ctstatelibrary.org/islandora/object/20002%3A860649972/datastream/TN/view/Optical%20Measurements%20of%20Whitecaps%20and%20Bubbles%20During%20Large%20Scale%20Wave%20Breaking%20in%20the%20Southern%20Ocean.jpg
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_rights In Copyright
These materials are provided for educational and research purposes only.
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