Sign in to use this feature.

Years

Between: -

Subjects

remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline

Journals

Article Types

Countries / Regions

Search Results (5)

Search Parameters:
Keywords = plume-sea interface

Order results
Result details
Results per page
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
22 pages, 5491 KiB  
Article
Lateral Border of a Small River Plume: Salinity Structure, Instabilities and Mass Transport
by Alexander Osadchiev, Alexandra Gordey, Alexandra Barymova, Roman Sedakov, Vladimir Rogozhin, Roman Zhiba and Roman Dbar
Remote Sens. 2022, 14(15), 3818; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14153818 - 8 Aug 2022
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 2606
Abstract
The interfaces between small river plumes and ambient seawater have extremely sharp horizontal and vertical salinity gradients, often accompanied by velocity shear. It results in formation of instabilities at the lateral borders of small plumes. In this study, we use high-resolution aerial remote [...] Read more.
The interfaces between small river plumes and ambient seawater have extremely sharp horizontal and vertical salinity gradients, often accompanied by velocity shear. It results in formation of instabilities at the lateral borders of small plumes. In this study, we use high-resolution aerial remote sensing supported by in situ measurements to study these instabilities. We describe their spatial and temporal characteristics and then reconstruct their relation to density gradient and velocity shear. We report that Rayleigh–Taylor instabilities, with spatial scales ~5–50 m, are common features of the sharp plume-sea interfaces and their sizes are proportional to the Atwood number determined by the cross-shore density gradient. Kelvin–Helmholtz instabilities have a smaller size (~3–7 m) and are formed at the plume border in case of velocity shear >20–30 cm/s. Both instabilities induce mass transport across the plume-sea interfaces, which modifies salinity structure of the plume borders and induces lateral mixing of small river plumes. In addition, aerial observations revealed wind-driven Stokes transport across the sharp plume-sea interface, which occurs in the shallow (~2–3 cm) surface layer. This process limitedly affects salinity structure and mixing at the plume border, however, it could be an important issue for the spread of river-borne floating particles in the ocean. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Seawater Bio-Optical Characteristics from Satellite Ocean Color Data)
Show Figures

Figure 1

37 pages, 11793 KiB  
Article
The Salinity Pilot-Mission Exploitation Platform (Pi-MEP): A Hub for Validation and Exploitation of Satellite Sea Surface Salinity Data
by Sébastien Guimbard, Nicolas Reul, Roberto Sabia, Sylvain Herlédan, Ziad El Khoury Hanna, Jean-Francois Piollé, Frédéric Paul, Tong Lee, Julian J. Schanze, Frederick M. Bingham, David Le Vine, Nadya Vinogradova-Shiffer, Susanne Mecklenburg, Klaus Scipal and Henri Laur
Remote Sens. 2021, 13(22), 4600; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13224600 - 16 Nov 2021
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 3640
Abstract
The Pilot-Mission Exploitation Platform (Pi-MEP) for salinity is an ESA initiative originally meant to support and widen the uptake of Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission data over the ocean. Starting in 2017, the project aims at setting up a computational web-based [...] Read more.
The Pilot-Mission Exploitation Platform (Pi-MEP) for salinity is an ESA initiative originally meant to support and widen the uptake of Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission data over the ocean. Starting in 2017, the project aims at setting up a computational web-based platform focusing on satellite sea surface salinity data, supporting studies on enhanced validation and scientific process over the ocean. It has been designed in close collaboration with a dedicated science advisory group in order to achieve three main objectives: gathering all the data required to exploit satellite sea surface salinity data, systematically producing a wide range of metrics for comparing and monitoring sea surface salinity products’ quality, and providing user-friendly tools to explore, visualize and exploit both the collected products and the results of the automated analyses. The Salinity Pi-MEP is becoming a reference hub for the validation of satellite sea surface salinity missions by providing valuable information on satellite products (SMOS, Aquarius, SMAP), an extensive in situ database (e.g., Argo, thermosalinographs, moorings, drifters) and additional thematic datasets (precipitation, evaporation, currents, sea level anomalies, sea surface temperature, etc.). Co-localized databases between satellite products and in situ datasets are systematically generated together with validation analysis reports for 30 predefined regions. The data and reports are made fully accessible through the web interface of the platform. The datasets, validation metrics and tools (automatic, user-driven) of the platform are described in detail in this paper. Several dedicated scienctific case studies involving satellite SSS data are also systematically monitored by the platform, including major river plumes, mesoscale signatures in boundary currents, high latitudes, semi-enclosed seas, and the high-precipitation region of the eastern tropical Pacific. Since 2019, a partnership in the Salinity Pi-MEP project has been agreed between ESA and NASA to enlarge focus to encompass the entire set of satellite salinity sensors. The two agencies are now working together to widen the platform features on several technical aspects, such as triple-collocation software implementation, additional match-up collocation criteria and sustained exploitation of data from the SPURS campaigns. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

22 pages, 10551 KiB  
Article
Multiscale Modeling of Convection and Pollutant Transport Associated with Volcanic Eruption and Lava Flow: Application to the April 2007 Eruption of the Piton de la Fournaise (Reunion Island)
by Jean-Baptiste Filippi, Jonathan Durand, Pierre Tulet and Soline Bielli
Atmosphere 2021, 12(4), 507; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos12040507 - 17 Apr 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3198
Abstract
Volcanic eruptions can cause damage to land and people living nearby, generate high concentrations of toxic gases, and also create large plumes that limit observations and the performance of forecasting models that rely on these observations. This study investigates the use of micro- [...] Read more.
Volcanic eruptions can cause damage to land and people living nearby, generate high concentrations of toxic gases, and also create large plumes that limit observations and the performance of forecasting models that rely on these observations. This study investigates the use of micro- to meso-scale simulation to represent and predict the convection, transport, and deposit of volcanic pollutants. The case under study is the 2007 eruption of the Piton de la Fournaise, simulated using a high-resolution, coupled lava/atmospheric approach (derived from wildfire/atmosphere coupled code) to account for the strong, localized heat and gaseous fluxes occurring near the vent, over the lava flow, and at the lava–sea interface. Higher resolution requires fluxes over the lava flow to be explicitly simulated to account for the induced convection over the flow, local mixing, and dilution. Comparisons with air quality values at local stations show that the simulation is in good agreement with observations in terms of sulfur concentration and dynamics, and performs better than lower resolution simulation with parameterized surface fluxes. In particular, the explicit representation of the thermal flows associated with lava allows the associated thermal breezes to be represented. This local modification of the wind flow strongly impacts the organization of the volcanic convection (injection height) and the regional transport of the sulfur dioxide emitted at the vent. These results show that explicitly solving volcanic activity/atmosphere complex interactions provides realistic forecasts of induced pollution. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Coupled Fire-Atmosphere Simulation)
Show Figures

Figure 1

28 pages, 7952 KiB  
Article
Airborne Remote Sensing of the Upper Ocean Turbulence during CASPER-East
by Ivan Savelyev, William David Miller, Mark Sletten, Geoffrey B. Smith, Dana K. Savidge, Glendon Frick, Steven Menk, Trent Moore, Tony De Paolo, Eric J. Terrill, Qing Wang and Robert Kipp Shearman
Remote Sens. 2018, 10(8), 1224; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs10081224 - 4 Aug 2018
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 4828
Abstract
This study takes on the challenge of resolving upper ocean surface currents with a suite of airborne remote sensing methodologies, simultaneously imaging the ocean surface in visible, infrared, and microwave bands. A series of flights were conducted over an air-sea interaction supersite established [...] Read more.
This study takes on the challenge of resolving upper ocean surface currents with a suite of airborne remote sensing methodologies, simultaneously imaging the ocean surface in visible, infrared, and microwave bands. A series of flights were conducted over an air-sea interaction supersite established 63 km offshore by a large multi-platform CASPER-East experiment. The supersite was equipped with a range of in situ instruments resolving air-sea interface and underwater properties, of which a bottom-mounted acoustic Doppler current profiler was used extensively in this paper for the purposes of airborne current retrieval validation and interpretation. A series of water-tracing dye releases took place in coordination with aircraft overpasses, enabling dye plume velocimetry over 100 m to 10 km spatial scales. Similar scales were resolved by a Multichannel Synthetic Aperture Radar, which resolved a swath of instantaneous surface velocities (wave and current) with 10 m resolution and 5 cm/s accuracy. Details of the skin temperature variability imprinted by the upper ocean turbulence were revealed in 1–14,000 m range of spatial scales by a mid-wave infrared camera. Combined, these methodologies provide a unique insight into the complex spatial structure of the upper ocean turbulence on a previously under-resolved range of spatial scales from meters to kilometers. However, much attention in this paper is dedicated to quantifying and understanding uncertainties and ambiguities associated with these remote sensing methodologies, especially regarding the smallest resolvable turbulent scales and reference depths of retrieved currents. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ocean Surface Currents: Progress in Remote Sensing and Validation)
Show Figures

Graphical abstract

14 pages, 861 KiB  
Article
Some Observational and Modeling Studies of the Atmospheric Boundary Layer at Mississippi Gulf Coast for Air Pollution Dispersion Assessment
by Anjaneyulu Yerramilli, Venkata Srinivas Challa, Jayakumar Indracanti, Hariprasad Dasari, Julius Baham, Chuck Patrick, John Young, Robert Hughes, Lorren D. White, Mark G. Hardy and Shelton Swanier
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2008, 5(5), 484-497; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph5050484 - 31 Dec 2008
Cited by 17 | Viewed by 13591
Abstract
Coastal atmospheric conditions widely vary from those over inland due to the land-sea interface, temperature contrast and the consequent development of local circulations. In this study a field meteorological experiment was conducted to measure vertical structure of boundary layer during the period 25-29 [...] Read more.
Coastal atmospheric conditions widely vary from those over inland due to the land-sea interface, temperature contrast and the consequent development of local circulations. In this study a field meteorological experiment was conducted to measure vertical structure of boundary layer during the period 25-29 June, 2007 at three locations Seabee base, Harrison and Wiggins sites in the Mississippi coast. A GPS Sonde along with slow ascent helium balloon and automated weather stations equipped with slow and fast response sensors were used in the experiment. GPS sonde were launched at three specific times (0700 LT, 1300 LT and 1800 LT) during the experiment days. The observations indicate shallow boundary layer near the coast which gradually develops inland. The weather research and forecasting (WRF) meso-scale atmospheric model and a Lagrangian particle dispersion model (HYSPLIT) are used to simulate the lower atmospheric flow and dispersion in a range of 100 km from the coast for 28-30 June, 2007. The simulated meteorological parameters were compared with the experimental observations. The meso-scale model results show significant temporal and spatial variations in the meteorological fields as a result of development of sea breeze flow, its coupling with the large scale flow field and the ensuing alteration in the mixing depth across the coast. Simulated ground-level concentrations of SO2 from four elevated point sources located along the coast indicate diurnal variation and impact of the local sea-land breeze on the direction of the plume. Model concentration levels were highest during the stable morning condition and during the sea-breeze time in the afternoon. The highest concentrations were found up to 40 km inland during sea breeze time. The study illustrates the application of field meteorological observations for the validation of WRF which is coupled to HYSPLIT for dispersion assessment in the coastal region. Full article
Show Figures

Back to TopTop