Models of the North Atlantic circulation

Homogeneous models of the central and western North Atlantic circulations are investigated. A topographic interior model is analysed to determine its behaviour under certain conditions of wind stress and basin geometry. This leads to the recognition of the need for transport layers along the contine...

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Main Author: Atkins, Nigel
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Kingston University 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/id/eprint/20490/
http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.351498
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spelling ftunivkingston:oai:eprints.kingston.ac.uk:20490 2023-05-15T17:31:56+02:00 Models of the North Atlantic circulation Atkins, Nigel 1984 https://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/id/eprint/20490/ http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.351498 unknown Kingston University Atkins, Nigel (1984) Models of the North Atlantic circulation. (PhD thesis), Kingston Polytechnic, . Thesis NonPeerReviewed 1984 ftunivkingston 2022-09-22T22:25:16Z Homogeneous models of the central and western North Atlantic circulations are investigated. A topographic interior model is analysed to determine its behaviour under certain conditions of wind stress and basin geometry. This leads to the recognition of the need for transport layers along the continental margins forming the western limits of the sea. The steeply inclined slope regions are found significant in this respect, provided that their widths are not less than O(E[sup]1/4) in magnitude, since if these become more narrow, the zones are not capable of transporting sufficient water volumes, without violating matching conditions demanded?y underlying lower Ekman layers. Steady models of the continental shelves off the eastern North American seaboard, with meridional coastlines, are considered. One of these permits the dominant alongshore velocity to equal a specified function of latitude along any chosen isoline of f/H. Another assumes that this current decays to zero on leaving the shelf region. This particular model is extended to remove the restriction of having a straight, north-south coast. In all cases, the direction in which information is transmitted has the coast to its right. Good qualitative agreement with observed current data from the area is noted. An O(E[sup]1/3)-wide, mildly topographic, abyssal depth layer located on the continental rise of the western Atlantic is analysed. This is found sufficient for completing the oceanic transport balance, and its proximity to the east of relatively narrow slopes off southern North America, makes it an attractive. model for the off-shelf behaviour of the Gulf Stream. The eastern North American coastline is approximated by an arc of a circle, with oceanic diameter, and a time-dependent model over its shelf zone is examined. This is capable of propagating low frequency continental shelf waves from the same, right-bounded direction as the aforementioned steady models. Thesis North Atlantic Kingston University London: Research Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Kingston University London: Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunivkingston
language unknown
description Homogeneous models of the central and western North Atlantic circulations are investigated. A topographic interior model is analysed to determine its behaviour under certain conditions of wind stress and basin geometry. This leads to the recognition of the need for transport layers along the continental margins forming the western limits of the sea. The steeply inclined slope regions are found significant in this respect, provided that their widths are not less than O(E[sup]1/4) in magnitude, since if these become more narrow, the zones are not capable of transporting sufficient water volumes, without violating matching conditions demanded?y underlying lower Ekman layers. Steady models of the continental shelves off the eastern North American seaboard, with meridional coastlines, are considered. One of these permits the dominant alongshore velocity to equal a specified function of latitude along any chosen isoline of f/H. Another assumes that this current decays to zero on leaving the shelf region. This particular model is extended to remove the restriction of having a straight, north-south coast. In all cases, the direction in which information is transmitted has the coast to its right. Good qualitative agreement with observed current data from the area is noted. An O(E[sup]1/3)-wide, mildly topographic, abyssal depth layer located on the continental rise of the western Atlantic is analysed. This is found sufficient for completing the oceanic transport balance, and its proximity to the east of relatively narrow slopes off southern North America, makes it an attractive. model for the off-shelf behaviour of the Gulf Stream. The eastern North American coastline is approximated by an arc of a circle, with oceanic diameter, and a time-dependent model over its shelf zone is examined. This is capable of propagating low frequency continental shelf waves from the same, right-bounded direction as the aforementioned steady models.
format Thesis
author Atkins, Nigel
spellingShingle Atkins, Nigel
Models of the North Atlantic circulation
author_facet Atkins, Nigel
author_sort Atkins, Nigel
title Models of the North Atlantic circulation
title_short Models of the North Atlantic circulation
title_full Models of the North Atlantic circulation
title_fullStr Models of the North Atlantic circulation
title_full_unstemmed Models of the North Atlantic circulation
title_sort models of the north atlantic circulation
publisher Kingston University
publishDate 1984
url https://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/id/eprint/20490/
http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.351498
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Atkins, Nigel (1984) Models of the North Atlantic circulation. (PhD thesis), Kingston Polytechnic, .
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