Acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the Norwegian Sea

In a computer simulation experiment, acoustic tomography is assessed as a means of measuring the seasonal flux of heat advected by the Norwegian Atlantic Current. Oceanic heat flux has traditionally been measured by various direct or indirect techniques that are prone to error or large uncertainty....

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Main Author: Barock, Richard Timothy
Other Authors: Chiu, Ching-Sang, Miller, James S., Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.), Oceanography
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10945/30631
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spelling ftnavalpschool:oai:calhoun.nps.edu:10945/30631 2024-06-23T07:55:43+00:00 Acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the Norwegian Sea Barock, Richard Timothy Chiu, Ching-Sang Miller, James S. Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) Oceanography 1990-06 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10945/30631 unknown Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School https://hdl.handle.net/10945/30631 This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States. Thesis 1990 ftnavalpschool 2024-06-04T14:19:46Z In a computer simulation experiment, acoustic tomography is assessed as a means of measuring the seasonal flux of heat advected by the Norwegian Atlantic Current. Oceanic heat flux has traditionally been measured by various direct or indirect techniques that are prone to error or large uncertainty. The tomographic technique offers distinct advantages over conventional methods in that temperature and current fields, that combine to yield heat flux in the ocean, can be determined at various spatial and temporal scales. The adequacy of the tomographic technique thus hinges on the question of how well can the temperature and current by resolved spatially? The spatial resolution of tomography varies with array size, number of transceivers used and the characteristics of the sound channel. In the assessment we use the General Digital Environmental Model (GDEM), a climatological data base, to simulate an ocean area 550 x 550 km squared off the Norwegian Coast. Resolution and variance analysis are performed on two circular arrays consisting of six transceivers. An important finding is that the horizontal resolution lengths of the current and temperature fields differ. For a six element array the horizontal resolution length is approximately one fifth the array diameter for the current field, whereas for the temperature field it is one sixth the array diameter. We then generate synthetic travel time data that have embedded within them temperature and current signals as well as random noise. We invert the synthetic travel time data to form estimates of the original fields using a linear optimal estimator based on the Gauss-Markoff theorem. We relate the sound speed perturbation field to potential temperature and compare these estimates to the original values. Finally we use the estimated fields to compute heat flux across a transect located within the array. We compare the actual to the estimated heat flux to asses the quality of the tomographically derived value. We have found that the quality of the heat flux estimates ... Thesis Norwegian Sea Naval Postgraduate School: Calhoun Norwegian Sea
institution Open Polar
collection Naval Postgraduate School: Calhoun
op_collection_id ftnavalpschool
language unknown
description In a computer simulation experiment, acoustic tomography is assessed as a means of measuring the seasonal flux of heat advected by the Norwegian Atlantic Current. Oceanic heat flux has traditionally been measured by various direct or indirect techniques that are prone to error or large uncertainty. The tomographic technique offers distinct advantages over conventional methods in that temperature and current fields, that combine to yield heat flux in the ocean, can be determined at various spatial and temporal scales. The adequacy of the tomographic technique thus hinges on the question of how well can the temperature and current by resolved spatially? The spatial resolution of tomography varies with array size, number of transceivers used and the characteristics of the sound channel. In the assessment we use the General Digital Environmental Model (GDEM), a climatological data base, to simulate an ocean area 550 x 550 km squared off the Norwegian Coast. Resolution and variance analysis are performed on two circular arrays consisting of six transceivers. An important finding is that the horizontal resolution lengths of the current and temperature fields differ. For a six element array the horizontal resolution length is approximately one fifth the array diameter for the current field, whereas for the temperature field it is one sixth the array diameter. We then generate synthetic travel time data that have embedded within them temperature and current signals as well as random noise. We invert the synthetic travel time data to form estimates of the original fields using a linear optimal estimator based on the Gauss-Markoff theorem. We relate the sound speed perturbation field to potential temperature and compare these estimates to the original values. Finally we use the estimated fields to compute heat flux across a transect located within the array. We compare the actual to the estimated heat flux to asses the quality of the tomographically derived value. We have found that the quality of the heat flux estimates ...
author2 Chiu, Ching-Sang
Miller, James S.
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Oceanography
format Thesis
author Barock, Richard Timothy
spellingShingle Barock, Richard Timothy
Acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the Norwegian Sea
author_facet Barock, Richard Timothy
author_sort Barock, Richard Timothy
title Acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the Norwegian Sea
title_short Acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the Norwegian Sea
title_full Acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the Norwegian Sea
title_fullStr Acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the Norwegian Sea
title_full_unstemmed Acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the Norwegian Sea
title_sort acoustic tomographic estimate of ocean advective heat flux [electronic resource] : a numerical assessment in the norwegian sea
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 1990
url https://hdl.handle.net/10945/30631
geographic Norwegian Sea
geographic_facet Norwegian Sea
genre Norwegian Sea
genre_facet Norwegian Sea
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10945/30631
op_rights This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
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