Physical Oceanography Study Guide

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SIO 210: Introduction to Physical Oceanography Lecture 1 SIO 210: Introduction to Physical Oceanography Lecture 1: Course Overview: What is Physical Oceanography? Lynne Talley, Fall, 2002 The purpose of these lecture notes is to provide some text and many of the figures used in class. The notes are incomplete, and do not replace the required readings. References are given in the and. What is physical oceanography?

Physical oceanography is the study of the fluid motions of the ocean. Its goal is to understand the processes at all time and space scales, to simulate these processes, and to make predictions if possible. What phenomena do physical oceanographers study? Surface and internal waves, air-sea exchanges, turbulence and mixing, acoustics, heating and cooling, wave and wind-induced currents, tides, tsunamis, storm surges, large-scale waves affected by earth's rotation, large-scale eddies, general circulation and its changes, coupled ocean-atmosphere dynamics for weather and climate).

What external forces act on the ocean? Wind waves, turbulence, large scale waves, circulation, heating due to the sun and geothermal energy, cooling, evaporation due to sun and wind, precipitation, tidal potential the moon and sun, earthquakes, gravity, friction) What internal forces act on the ocean? (pressure gradients, viscosity or friction) 2. Geographical setting (see texts and study maps) (zonal = east-west and meridional = north-south). Stewart's online book, chapter 3. from R. Stewart's online book, chapter 3 Earth is 70.8% water-covered.

In the zonal direction, there is no land between 85-90 degrees N and between 55-60 degrees S. At latitudes 45-70N, there is more land than water.

Answers

At latitudes 70-90S there is only land (Antarctica). The areas of the oceans are: Pacific (179 x1e6 km2), Atlantic (106x1e6 km2), Indian (75 x1e6 km2). The order of magnitude of the horizontal length scales that we associate with these oceans are: Pacific (15,000 km), Atlantic (5,000 km), Indian (5,000 km). The earth's radius is approximately 6371 km. (The earth is actually not a sphere, but this is close enough for us.) The average depth of the ocean is about 4000 m (actually 3795 m).

Thus the ocean is a thin skin on the outside of the earth. The average height of land is 245 m. The maximum elevation is about 9,000 m (Mt. Everest) and the maximum ocean depth is about 11,500 m (Mindanao Trench). We divide the ocean regions into: Oceans - Atlantic, Pacific, Indian.

We often call the region south of about 40S or 30S the 'Southern Ocean'. Mediterranean seas - Mediterranean, Arctic, Gulf of Mexico, Red Sea, Persian Gulf.

Marginal seas - many. Examples: Pacific (Bering Sea), Atlantic (Caribbean), Indian (Andaman).

Inland seas - Black, Caspian Seas, Lake Baikal, Great Lakes. Areas of open oceans are sometimes referred to as 'seas', mainly for historical reasons and geographical convenience.

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There are no rules about whether some areas should have names and others should not. Examples are: Arctic (Greenland, Norwegian, Iceland, Kara, Barents, Chukchi Seas), N. Atlantic (Labrador, Irminger, Sargasso Seas), Southern Ocean (Weddell, Ross Seas), Indian (Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal), South Pacific (Tasman Sea), North Pacific (Gulf of Alaska).

Methods of study There are several complementary approaches to studying the ocean: (1) observations, (2) process models, including pure theory and simplified numerical models, (3) simulations of the flow using complex numerical models, (4) combined observational/numerical modeling simulations (data assimilation). The boundaries between these are not firm - observational analysis often includes modeling, process models are usually based on observations, complex numerical models are often exploited to understand general processes.

This course concentrates on simple physical processes and observations, but some examples will be drawn from numerical modeling. The powerpoint figures shown above include examples from both observations and modeling. Wmf bistro service manual.

Scale analysis A very small set of equations governs all the motions of fluids (5 equations for the ocean, to be introduced in the next lecture). This small set governs all scales from nearly-molecular scale to capillary waves to global circulation. As we will see, this set of equations is nonlinear, which means that many terms are products of two things that vary (i.e. Velocity times velocity, or velocity times density, etc). We can't possibly solve for all ranges of motion at the same time - direct solutions of the complete governing equations (pencil and paper) are impossible and there simply isn't enough compuatation power to cover all possible motions. The nonlinearities make theoretical solutions difficult. Therefore, fluid mechanics is a science of approximation.

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This differs from the traditional physics and math that you might have studied before, with precise answers and proofs. Advanced applied mathematics includes the rigorous, justified approximation methods used in fluid mechanics. Approximations must be justified. Much of the debate about validity of a particular numerical model of this or that centers on justifying either the physical approximation or the numerical resolution (time and space scales that are resolved). Almost all fluids models include scales of motion that are smaller than the modeled scales. These unresolved processes might impact the outcome of the resolved processes, and so a lot of work goes into 'parameterizing' the 'sub-grid' scale processes. In theoretical analyses, this step is called 'closure'.

As a first and necessary step, we evaluate the scales of the motion that we wish to resolve. We then perform a rigorous analysis of the governing equations, based on this scale analysis. All properties that characterize the fluid can be scaled - for instance, distance, height, time, velocity (horizontal and vertical), density (variations), temperature, salinity, pressure. When we want to compare the sizes of two terms that have the same units (i.e. Same units in terms of meters, seconds, kilograms, degrees C), we first figure out the scales of the terms.

The scale of a particular term will have exactly the same units as the term itself. For instance, the time derivative of velocity, du/dt, where u is velocity and t is time, has the scale U/T, where U is the typical size of the velocity, and T is the typical time scale.

Then to compare the two terms, we look at the ratio of the two terms' scalings. In order to compare the two terms, they must have the same units to start with. Therefore the ratio of the two scalings will have no units (units = 1), that is, no length, time, etc. This ratio is called a non-dimensional parameter since it is dimensionless. For example, if we want to compare dw/dt and du/dt, where w is vertical velocity and u is horizontal velocity, the scales of the two terms are W/T and U/T.

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Each of these dimensional scales has units length/time^2. The non-dimensional ratio of the two is W/U, i.e. If the horizontal and vertical velocities in a particular motion are of about the same size, then this ratio is order (1). If vertical velocity is much smaller than the horizontal velocity, then this ratio is small. After evaluating the relative size of all of the terms in our equations, using these scalings, which are based entirely on the physical system we are looking at (i.e.

Is it a surface wave or the whole Pacific general circulation), we then start out our modeling. We carefully take into account which terms are small, and ignore them 'at first order', meaning in the first step of our analysis. We might look at how they correct the flow later in the same analysis. A very basic non-dimensional parameter that comes from our discussion of the geographic setting above is the aspect ratio, which is the ratio height/length. For some fluid motions in the ocean, such as surface waves in deep water or convection cells, the aspect ratio is order (1).

(That is, the height and length are the same order of magnitude, although they might not be precisely the same number.) In this case, the horizontal and vertical flows for instance could be about the same size. For other oceanic flows, such as surface waves in shallow water or the general circulation, the aspect ratio might be small (order 0.1 or 0.01 or smaller). In this case, motion in the vertical direction will be very different (smaller) than motion in the horizontal direction. Another very useful ratio is that of the earth's rotation time scale to the time scale of the motion ( 1 day/T). For surface waves, this is a large number, and earth's rotation is not important.

For internal waves, tides, this is order 1, and rotation and changing motion are both important. For the ocean circulation, this ratio is very small, and time dependence is much less important than rotation. This is all rather abstract, and we will not belabor it. We will also not spend any time in this course developing the equations of motion and scaling them - this is the task of fluid mechanics and geophysical fluid dynamics courses. However, it is important to have a feel for how physical oceanographers justify simplifying the governing equations to study each particular process.

Example of scales: the general circulation. Horizontal spatial scale: 100s to 1000s of kilometers. Vertical spatial scale: 1 to 5 km.

Aspect ratio: H/L = O(.01) to O(.001).

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