Record Details

The thinness of oceanic temperature gradients

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title The thinness of oceanic temperature gradients
Names Caldwell, Douglas R. (creator)
Chriss, T.M. (creator)
Newberger, P.A. (creator)
Dillon, T.M. (creator)
Date Issued 1981-05-20 (iso8601)
Abstract A test of the scaling of the extent of the thinnest vertical temperature gradients, in the near-bottom
boundary layer on the Oregon shelf, shows that the Batchelor wave number determines the cutoff wave
number in vertical temperature gradient spectra. In combination with previous results, in other words,
this test shows that the smallest scale at which significant temperature variance due to turbulence exists at
any given point in the ocean is determined by the Batchelor scale, (vD²/ε)^(1/4), v being the kinematic viscosity, D
the thermal diffusivity, and ε the kinetic energy dissipation per unit mass. Stress measurements
in the viscous sublayer provide estimates of ε.
Genre Article
Identifier Caldwell, D. R., Chriss, T. M., Newberger, P. A., & Dillon, T. M. (1981). The thinness of oceanic temperature gradients. Journal of Geophysical Research, 86(C5), 4290-4292.

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