id ftdtic:ADA423293
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdtic:ADA423293 2023-05-15T17:33:02+02:00 Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation Gille, Sarah T. Metzger, E. J. Tokmakian, Robin NAVAL RESEARCH LAB STENNIS SPACE CENTER MS OCEANOGRAPHY DIV 2004-03 text/html http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA423293 http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA423293 en eng http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA423293 APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE DTIC AND NTIS Physical and Dynamic Oceanography Fluid Mechanics *WATER FLOW *OCEAN CURRENTS *BATHYMETRY *SEA WATER *CIRCULATION *OCEAN BOTTOM TOPOGRAPHY COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION REPRINTS SURFACE WATERS BARRIERS MIXED LAYER(MARINE) OCEAN MODELS NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN HYDRODYNAMICS DEEP WATER WORKSHOPS INDIAN OCEAN OCEAN BASINS SOUTH CHINA SEA STRAITS SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN EAST CHINA SEA JAPAN SEA JAVA SEA OCEAN FLOWS OVERFLOW REGIONS *OCEAN CIRCULATION SURFACE CURRENTS ABYSSAL CURRENTS EKWC(EAST KOREAN WARM CURRENT) HORIZONTAL RESOLUTION HYDRAULIC OVERFLOWS PE601153N Text 2004 ftdtic 2016-02-21T08:07:43Z Seafloor topography influences ocean circulation in two basic ways. First, it steers ocean flows. Second, it provides barriers that prevent deep waters from mixing, except within deep passageways that connect ocean basins or in hydraulically controlled overflow regions. This paper explores the impact of both of these processes on ocean circulation. The examples highlighted here were among the broad range of topics explored at a workshop on "Ocean Circulation, Bathymetry, and Climate," held at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in October 2002. (8 figures, 27 refs.) Published in Oceanography, Special Issue - Bathymetry from Space, v17 n1, p47-54, Mar 2004. The original document contains color images. All DTIC reproductions will be in black and white. Text North Atlantic South Atlantic Ocean Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database Indian Scripps ENVELOPE(-63.783,-63.783,-69.150,-69.150)
institution Open Polar
collection Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
op_collection_id ftdtic
language English
topic Physical and Dynamic Oceanography
Fluid Mechanics
*WATER FLOW
*OCEAN CURRENTS
*BATHYMETRY
*SEA WATER
*CIRCULATION
*OCEAN BOTTOM TOPOGRAPHY
COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION
REPRINTS
SURFACE WATERS
BARRIERS
MIXED LAYER(MARINE)
OCEAN MODELS
NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
HYDRODYNAMICS
DEEP WATER
WORKSHOPS
INDIAN OCEAN
OCEAN BASINS
SOUTH CHINA SEA
STRAITS
SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
EAST CHINA SEA
JAPAN SEA
JAVA SEA
OCEAN FLOWS
OVERFLOW REGIONS
*OCEAN CIRCULATION
SURFACE CURRENTS
ABYSSAL CURRENTS
EKWC(EAST KOREAN WARM CURRENT)
HORIZONTAL RESOLUTION
HYDRAULIC OVERFLOWS
PE601153N
spellingShingle Physical and Dynamic Oceanography
Fluid Mechanics
*WATER FLOW
*OCEAN CURRENTS
*BATHYMETRY
*SEA WATER
*CIRCULATION
*OCEAN BOTTOM TOPOGRAPHY
COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION
REPRINTS
SURFACE WATERS
BARRIERS
MIXED LAYER(MARINE)
OCEAN MODELS
NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
HYDRODYNAMICS
DEEP WATER
WORKSHOPS
INDIAN OCEAN
OCEAN BASINS
SOUTH CHINA SEA
STRAITS
SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
EAST CHINA SEA
JAPAN SEA
JAVA SEA
OCEAN FLOWS
OVERFLOW REGIONS
*OCEAN CIRCULATION
SURFACE CURRENTS
ABYSSAL CURRENTS
EKWC(EAST KOREAN WARM CURRENT)
HORIZONTAL RESOLUTION
HYDRAULIC OVERFLOWS
PE601153N
Gille, Sarah T.
Metzger, E. J.
Tokmakian, Robin
Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation
topic_facet Physical and Dynamic Oceanography
Fluid Mechanics
*WATER FLOW
*OCEAN CURRENTS
*BATHYMETRY
*SEA WATER
*CIRCULATION
*OCEAN BOTTOM TOPOGRAPHY
COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION
REPRINTS
SURFACE WATERS
BARRIERS
MIXED LAYER(MARINE)
OCEAN MODELS
NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
HYDRODYNAMICS
DEEP WATER
WORKSHOPS
INDIAN OCEAN
OCEAN BASINS
SOUTH CHINA SEA
STRAITS
SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
EAST CHINA SEA
JAPAN SEA
JAVA SEA
OCEAN FLOWS
OVERFLOW REGIONS
*OCEAN CIRCULATION
SURFACE CURRENTS
ABYSSAL CURRENTS
EKWC(EAST KOREAN WARM CURRENT)
HORIZONTAL RESOLUTION
HYDRAULIC OVERFLOWS
PE601153N
description Seafloor topography influences ocean circulation in two basic ways. First, it steers ocean flows. Second, it provides barriers that prevent deep waters from mixing, except within deep passageways that connect ocean basins or in hydraulically controlled overflow regions. This paper explores the impact of both of these processes on ocean circulation. The examples highlighted here were among the broad range of topics explored at a workshop on "Ocean Circulation, Bathymetry, and Climate," held at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in October 2002. (8 figures, 27 refs.) Published in Oceanography, Special Issue - Bathymetry from Space, v17 n1, p47-54, Mar 2004. The original document contains color images. All DTIC reproductions will be in black and white.
author2 NAVAL RESEARCH LAB STENNIS SPACE CENTER MS OCEANOGRAPHY DIV
format Text
author Gille, Sarah T.
Metzger, E. J.
Tokmakian, Robin
author_facet Gille, Sarah T.
Metzger, E. J.
Tokmakian, Robin
author_sort Gille, Sarah T.
title Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation
title_short Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation
title_full Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation
title_fullStr Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation
title_full_unstemmed Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation
title_sort seafloor topography and ocean circulation
publishDate 2004
url http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA423293
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA423293
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.783,-63.783,-69.150,-69.150)
geographic Indian
Scripps
geographic_facet Indian
Scripps
genre North Atlantic
South Atlantic Ocean
genre_facet North Atlantic
South Atlantic Ocean
op_source DTIC AND NTIS
op_relation http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA423293
op_rights APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
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