DocumentCode :
2909770
Title :
Mooring motion influences on current measurements
Author :
Halpern, David
Author_Institution :
NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Lab., Seattle, WA, USA
Volume :
1
fYear :
1978
fDate :
28491
Firstpage :
69
Lastpage :
75
Abstract :
An important observational problem related to improving coupled ocean-atmosphere models is the determination of the vertical distribution of horizontal currents generated in the upper mixed layer of the ocean by the passage of a storm. Mixed layer shears might be as large as 0.04 sec-1. Because rectification of near-surface current measurements by mooring line motions reduces the accuracy of near-surface circulation studies, to what extent do moored current measurements represent the near-surface horizontal velocity field? Results from several intercomparison tests indicate that mooring-related rectification of AMF vector-averaging current meter (VACM) measurements made near the surface beneath a surface-following float moored in deep-water was small, approximately a few cm sec-1, or 10-15 percent of the near-surface current generated by a storm.
Keywords :
Blades; Current measurement; Oceans; Pollution measurement; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Storms; Surface contamination; Testing; Vibration measurement;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Current Measurement, Proceedings of the 1978 IEEE First Working Conference on
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CCM.1978.1158391
Filename :
1158391
Link To Document :
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