The Rough Ocean
Informations
- Funding country
Norway
- Acronym
- -
- URL
- -
- Start date
- 1/1/2020
- End date
- 12/31/2024
- Budget
- 948,207 EUR
Fundings
Name | Role | Start | End | Amount |
---|---|---|---|---|
KLIMAFORSK - Large scale programme on Climate | Grant | - | - | 948,207 EUR |
Abstract
Albert Einstein said "everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler". This applies well to many theories underpinning physical oceanography, the study of the ocean dynamics. People have assumed, for example, that the ocean has a constant density, is forced by constant winds and has a flat bottom. These assumptions have been revisited in turn, leading to alterations in our understanding. Arguably though, the flat bottom concept remains lodged in our perception. We use flat bottom functions to describe the vertical structure of currents, discuss the depth-averaged response, and compare satellite observations with flat bottom wave modes. But nowhere is the bottom flat, and there is mounting evidence that bottom topography affects currents all the way to the surface. In The Rough Ocean, physical oceanographers and marine geologists will work together to study specific flow-topography interactions. These include how topography affects the Gulf Stream and "planetary waves", with scales of hundreds to thousands of kilometers, but also submarine topographic waves, which are often invisible at the surface but may contribute significantly to the oceanic energy balance. The results will improve our future analyses, but also how we represent topography in climate models, which cannot resolve topographic interactions at small scales.