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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Tidal Asymmetry And Residual Circulation Over Linear Sandbanks And Their Implication On Sediment Transport: A Process-Oriented Numerical Study, Rosario Sanay, George Voulgaris, John C. Warner Dec 2007

Tidal Asymmetry And Residual Circulation Over Linear Sandbanks And Their Implication On Sediment Transport: A Process-Oriented Numerical Study, Rosario Sanay, George Voulgaris, John C. Warner

Faculty Publications

A series of process-oriented numerical simulations is carried out in order to evaluate the relative role of locally generated residual flow and overtides on net sediment transport over linear sandbanks. The idealized bathymetry and forcing are similar to those present in the Norfolk Sandbanks, North Sea. The importance of bottom drag parameterization and bank orientation with respect to the ambient flow is examined in terms of residual flow and overtide generation, and subsequent sediment transport implications are discussed. The results show that although the magnitudes of residual flow and overtides are sensitive to bottom roughness parameterization and bank orientation, the …


Hunting For Hydrothermal Vents Along The Galápagos Spreading Center, Rachel M. Haymon, Edward T. Baker, Joseph A. Resing, Scott M. White, Ken C. Macdonald Dec 2007

Hunting For Hydrothermal Vents Along The Galápagos Spreading Center, Rachel M. Haymon, Edward T. Baker, Joseph A. Resing, Scott M. White, Ken C. Macdonald

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Relationship Between Vegetation Biophysical Properties And Surface Temperature Using Multisensor Satellite Data, Seungbum Hong, Venkataraman Lakshmi, Eric Small Nov 2007

Relationship Between Vegetation Biophysical Properties And Surface Temperature Using Multisensor Satellite Data, Seungbum Hong, Venkataraman Lakshmi, Eric Small

Faculty Publications

Vegetation is an important factor in global climatic variability and plays a key role in the complexinteractions between the land surface and the atmosphere. This study focuses on the spatial and temporalvariability of vegetation and its relationship with land–atmosphere interactions. The authors have analyzedthe vegetation water content (VegWC) from the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer for EOS(AMSR-E), the leaf area index (LAI), the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), the land surfacetemperature (Ts), and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). Three regions,which have climatically differing characteristics, have been selected: the North America Monsoon System(NAMS) region, the Southern Great Plains (SGP) region, and …


Sea Surface Pco2‐Sst Relationships Across A Cold‐Core Cyclonic Eddy: Implications For Understanding Regional Variability And Air‐Sea Gas Exchange, Feizhou Chen, Wei‐Jun Cai, Claudia R. Benitez-Nelson, Yongchen Wang May 2007

Sea Surface Pco2‐Sst Relationships Across A Cold‐Core Cyclonic Eddy: Implications For Understanding Regional Variability And Air‐Sea Gas Exchange, Feizhou Chen, Wei‐Jun Cai, Claudia R. Benitez-Nelson, Yongchen Wang

Faculty Publications

[1] This study is designed to improve the understanding of how biologically productive, cold‐core cyclonic eddies affect sea surface pCO2 in the lee of the main Hawaiian Islands in the subtropical North Pacific Gyre. We identified three unique relationships between pCO2 and sea surface temperature (SST). A positive correlation between pCO2 and SST was observed in the waters surrounding the eddy suggesting surface CO2 is controlled primarily by thermodynamics. In contrast, a negative relationship was observed within the eddy core as a result of the upwelling of CO2‐enriched subsurface waters. A third relationship existed throughout the rest …


Submarine Volcanic Morphology Of The Western Galapagos Based On Em300 Bathymetry And Mr1 Side-Scan Sonar, Jennifer B. Glass, D J. Fornari, Hillary F. Hall, Allison A. Cougan, Heidi A. Berkenbosch, Mark L. Holmes, Scott M. White, Giorgio De La Torre Mar 2007

Submarine Volcanic Morphology Of The Western Galapagos Based On Em300 Bathymetry And Mr1 Side-Scan Sonar, Jennifer B. Glass, D J. Fornari, Hillary F. Hall, Allison A. Cougan, Heidi A. Berkenbosch, Mark L. Holmes, Scott M. White, Giorgio De La Torre

Faculty Publications

A compilation of high-resolution EM300 multibeam bathymetric and existing MR1 side-scan sonar data was used to investigate the volcanic morphology of the flanks of the western Galapagos Islands. The data portray an assortment of constructional volcanic features on the shallow to deep submarine flanks of Fernandina, Isabela, and Santiago Islands, including rift zones and groups of cones that are considered to be the primary elements in constructing the archipelagic apron. Ten submarine rift zones were mapped, ranging in length from 5 to 20 km, comparable in length to western Canary Island rift zones but significantly shorter than Hawaiian submarine rift …


Particulate Organic Carbon Fluxes Along Upwelling‐Dominated Continental Margins: Rates And Mechanisms, Robert Thunell, Claudia R. Benitez-Nelson, Ramon Varela, Yrene Astor, Frank Muller‐Karger Mar 2007

Particulate Organic Carbon Fluxes Along Upwelling‐Dominated Continental Margins: Rates And Mechanisms, Robert Thunell, Claudia R. Benitez-Nelson, Ramon Varela, Yrene Astor, Frank Muller‐Karger

Faculty Publications

[1] Time series sediment trap samples were used to examine the rates and mechanisms of particulate organic carbon (POC) flux at three continental margin locations, Santa Barbara Basin, Cariaco Basin, and Guaymas Basin, marked by seasonal upwelling and high primary production. The mean POC flux in Santa Barbara Basin (0.096 g m−2 d−1) is nearly twice that of Cariaco Basin and 4 times higher than that in Guaymas Basin, with all three sites having POC fluxes significantly higher than the open ocean average (0.007 g m−2 d−1). In Cariaco Basin, the only site with available primary production numbers, there is …


Application Of The Empirical Mode Decomposition And Hilbert-Huang Transform To Seismic Reflection Data, Bradley M. Battista, Camelia C. Knapp, Tom Mcgee, Vaughn Goebel Jan 2007

Application Of The Empirical Mode Decomposition And Hilbert-Huang Transform To Seismic Reflection Data, Bradley M. Battista, Camelia C. Knapp, Tom Mcgee, Vaughn Goebel

Faculty Publications

Advancements in signal processing may allow for improved imaging and analysis of complex geologic targets found in seismic reflection data. A recent contribution to signal processing is the empirical mode decomposition (EMD) which combines with the Hilbert transform as the Hilbert- Huang transform (HHT). The EMD empirically reduces a time series to several subsignals, each of which is input to the same time-frequency environment via the Hilbert transform. The HHT allows for signals describing stochastic or astochastic processes to be analyzed using instantaneous attributes in the time-frequency domain. The HHT is applied herein to seismic reflection data to: (1) assess …