A Laboratory Model of a Cooled Continental Shelf

Abstract

A laboratory model of wintertime cooling over a continental shelf has a water surface cooled by air in an annular rotating tank. A flat shallow outer 'continental shelf' region is next to a conical 'continental slope' bottom and a flat 'deep ocean' center. The shelf flow consists of cellular convection cells descending into a region with very complicated baroclinic eddies. Extremely pronounced fronts are found at the shelf break and over the slope. Associated with these are sizable geostrophic currents along the shelf and over shelf break contours. Eddies are particularly energetic there. Cooling rate is compared with temperature difference between 'continental shelf' and 'deep ocean'. Scaling considerations produce an empirical best fit formula for temperature difference as a function of cooling rate. This produces a relatively straight regression line over a wide range of rotation rates, shelf depths and cooling rates. If this formula is valid for the ocean, water over continental shelves will be much colder due to constraints imposed by rotation of the earth than if the fluid were not rotating.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 01, 1993
Accession Number
ADA270862

Entities

People

  • J. A. Whitehead
  • Robert E. Frazel

Organizations

  • Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Advanced Electronics

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Civil Engineering
  • Climate Change
  • Cold Water
  • Continental Shelves
  • Convection
  • Deep Oceans
  • Drops
  • Fluid Dynamics
  • Fluids
  • Heat Flux
  • Heat Transfer
  • Heat Transmission
  • Hydrodynamics
  • Isotherms
  • Measurement
  • Oceanography
  • Oceans

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science / Meteorology, specifically Wind Wave Turbulence.
  • Polar and Arctic Studies