A Model Study on the Generation of Internal Tides by Tidal Flows Over a Submerged Seamount in the Channel

2010 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuqun Cai
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (19) ◽  
pp. 2313 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina González-Haro ◽  
Aurélien Ponte ◽  
Emmanuelle Autret

The expected amplitude of fixed-point sea surface temperature (SST) fluctuations induced by barotropic and baroclinic tidal flows is estimated from tidal current atlases and SST observations. The fluctuations considered are the result of the advection of pre-existing SST fronts by tidal currents. They are thus confined to front locations and exhibit fine-scale spatial structures. The amplitude of these tidally induced SST fluctuations is proportional to the scalar product of SST frontal gradients and tidal currents. Regional and global estimations of these expected amplitudes are presented. We predict barotropic tidal motions produce SST fluctuations that may reach amplitudes of 0.3 K. Baroclinic (internal) tides produce SST fluctuations that may reach values that are weaker than 0.1 K. The amplitudes and the detectability of tidally induced fluctuations of SST are discussed in the light of expected SST fluctuations due to other geophysical processes and instrumental (pixel) noise. We conclude that actual observations of tidally induced SST fluctuations are a challenge with present-day observing systems.


Author(s):  
Madeleine M. Hamann ◽  
Matthew H. Alford ◽  
Andrew J. Lucas ◽  
Amy F. Waterhouse ◽  
Gunnar Voet

AbstractThe La Jolla Canyon System (LJCS) is a small, steep, shelf-incising canyon offshore of San Diego, California. Observations conducted in the fall of 2016 capture the dynamics of internal tides and turbulence patterns. Semidiurnal (D2) energy flux was oriented up-canyon; 62±20% of the signal was contained in mode 1 at the offshore mooring. The observed mode-1 D2 tide was partly standing based on the ratio of group speed times energy (cgE) and energy flux (F). Enhanced dissipation occurred near the canyon head at mid-depths associated with elevated strain arising from the standing wave pattern. Modes 2-5 were progressive, and energy fluxes associated with these modes were oriented down-canyon, suggesting that incident mode-1 waves were back-reflected and scattered. Flux integrated over all modes across a given canyon cross-section was always onshore and generally decreased moving shoreward (240±15 kW to 5±0.3 kW), with a 50kW increase in flux occurring on a section inshore of the canyon’s major bend, possibly due to reflection of incident waves from the supercritical sidewalls of the bend. Flux convergence from canyon mouth to head was balanced by the volume integrated dissipation observed. By comparing energy budgets from a global compendium of canyons with sufficient observations (6 in total), a similar balance was found. One exception was Juan de Fuca canyon, where such a balance was not found, likely due to its non-tidal flows. These results suggest that internal tides incident at the mouth of a canyon system are dissipated therein rather than leaking over the sidewalls or siphoning energy to other wave frequencies.


2003 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 170-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dake Chen ◽  
Hsien Wang Ou ◽  
Changming Dong

2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 144-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Bäckström ◽  
Fredrik Björklund

The difference between evaluatively loaded and evaluatively neutralized five-factor inventory items was used to create new variables, one for each factor in the five-factor model. Study 1 showed that these variables can be represented in terms of a general evaluative factor which is related to social desirability measures and indicated that the factor may equally well be represented as separate from the Big Five as superordinate to them. Study 2 revealed an evaluative factor in self-ratings and peer ratings of the Big Five, but the evaluative factor in self-reports did not correlate with such a factor in ratings by peers. In Study 3 the evaluative factor contributed above the Big Five in predicting work performance, indicating a substance component. The results are discussed in relation to measurement issues and self-serving biases.


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