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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Aquatic sciences 60 (1998), S. 191-209 
    ISSN: 1420-9055
    Keywords: Key words: Dissipation rate, detection limit, shear measurement, turbulence, mixing.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract: The MST (Microstructure-Turbulence) Profiler is a newly developed operational microstructure measuring system, specially designed for marine and limnic turbulence measurements. The profiler can be used for sinking and uprising measurements and is equipped with a new type of current shear sensor. We have tested the MST Profiler in several field measuring campaigns in deep Alpine lakes. The investigations were focused on the internal vibration level of the profiler and its lower detection limit for dissipation rate estimates (pseudo dissipation). The upper detection limit was estimated based on the geometry of the shear sensor. The test measurements gave no indication of pronounced internal profiler vibrations interfering with dissipation measurements. The pseudo dissipation level (noise) of the profiler was found to be as low as 5 ˙ 10-12W/kg under quiet conditions at sinking velocities below 0.4m/s. At 0.8m/s sinking velocity, a pseudo dissipation of 4 ˙ 10-11W/kg was obtained. At rising measurements with additional sources of profiler vibrations due to influence of the cable the pseudo dissipation is about twice that for sinking measurements. For the upper detection limit which can be measured without correction for unresolved variance of the shear spectrum, a value of 10-4 W/kg was estimated.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    Acoustical Society of America
    In:  [Paper] In: 21. International Congress on Acoustics (ICA2013) der Acoustical Society of America (ASA), 02.-06.07.2013, Montreal, Canada ; 005010-005010 .
    Publication Date: 2013-07-15
    Description: The Naval Research Laboratory and collaborating partners carried out two dedicated seismic oceanography field experiments in two very different strong frontal regions. ADRIASEISMIC took seismic oceanography measurements at the confluence of North Adriatic Dense Water advected along the Western Adriatic Current and Modified Levantine Intermediate Water advected around the topographic rim of the Southern Adriatic basin. ARC12 took seismic oceanography measurements in and around the Agulhas Return Current as it curved northwards past the Agulhas Plateau and interacted with a large anticyclone that had collided with the current. Despite one study focused on coastal boundary currents and the other focused on a major Western Boundary Current extension, the complex horizontal structures seen through seismic imaging are tied to the processes of thermal intrusions and interleaving in both systems. Seismic Oceanography provides a unique capability of tracking the fine-scale horizontal extent of these intrusions.
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-09-19
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Cisewski, Boris; Strass, Volker H; Prandke, Hartmut (2005): Upper-ocean vertical mixing in the Antarctic Polar Front Zone. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 52(9-10), 1087-1108, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2005.01.010
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: The mixing regime of the upper 180 m of a mesoscale eddy in the vicinity of the Antarctic Polar Front at 47° S and 21° E was investigated during the R.V. Polarstern cruise ANT-XVIII/2 within the scope of the iron fertilization experiment EisenEx. On the basis of hydrographic CTD and ADCP profiles we deduced the vertical diffusivity Kz from two different parameterizations. Since these parameterizations bear the character of empirical functions, based on theoretical and idealized assumptions, they were inter alia compared with Cox-number and Thorpe-scale related diffusivities deduced from microstructure measurements, which supplied the first direct insights into turbulence of this ocean region. Values of Kz in the range of 10**-4 - 10**-3 m**2/s appear as a rather robust estimate of vertical diffusivity within the seasonal pycnocline. Values in the mixed layer above are more variable in time and reach 10**-1 m**2/s during periods of strong winds. The results confirm a close agreement between the microstructure-based eddy diffusivities and eddy diffusivities calculated after the parameterization of Pacanowski and Philander [1981, Journal of Physical Oceanography 11, 1443-1451, doi:10.1175/1520-0485(1981)011〈1443:POVMIN〉2.0.CO;2].
    Keywords: Acoustic Doppler Current Profiling, vessel-mounted (VM-ADCP); Acoustic gain control 1; Acoustic gain control 2; Acoustic gain control 3; Acoustic gain control 4; ANT-XVIII/2; AWI_PhyOce; CT; Current velocity, east-west; Current velocity, north-south; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; EisenEx; European Iron Enrichment Experiment in the Southern Ocean; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Physical Oceanography @ AWI; Polarstern; PS58/2-track; PS58 EISENEX; Underway cruise track measurements
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 11488483 data points
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  • 5
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Strass, Volker H; Leach, Harry; Prandke, Hartmut; Donnelly, Matthew; Bracher, Astrid; Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter A (2016): The physical environmental conditions for biogeochemical differences along the Antarctic Circumpolar Current in the Atlantic Sector during late austral summer 2012. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 20 pp, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2016.05.018
    Publication Date: 2024-03-23
    Description: The physical and biological carbon pumps in the different hydrographic and biogeochemical regimes of the Atlantic Sector of the Southern Ocean are controlled by a series of coupled physical, chemical and biological processes and a project named Eddy-Pump was designed to study them. The Eddy Pump field campaign was carried out during RV Polarstern Cruise ANT-XXVIII/3 between January and March 2012. Particular emphasis was laid on the differences which occur along the axis of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) with its associated mesoscale eddy field. The study sites were selected in order to represent (1) the central ACC with its regular separation in different frontal jets, investigated by a meridional transect along 10°E; (2) a large-scale bloom west of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge which lasted several months with conspicuous chlorophyll-poor waters to its immediate east studied by a three-dimensional mesoscale survey centred at 12°40'W; and (3) the Georgia Basin north of the island of South Georgia, which regularly features an extended and dense phytoplankton bloom, was investigated by a mesoscale survey centred at 38°12'W. While Eddy-Pump represents an interdisciplinary project by design, we here focus on describing the variable physical environment within which the different biogeochemical regimes developed. For describing the physical environment we use measurements of temperature, salinity and density, of mixed-layer turbulence parameters, of dynamic heights and horizontal current vectors, and of flow trajectories obtained from surface drifters and submerged floats. This serves as background information for the analyses of biological and chemical processes and of biogeochemical fluxes addressed by other papers in this issue. The section along 10°E between 44°S and 53°S showed a classical ACC structure with well-known hydrographic fronts, the Subantarctic Front (SAF) at 46.5°S, the Antarctic Polar Front (APF) split in two, at 49.25°S and 50.5°S, and the Southern Polar Front (SPF) at 52.5°S. Each front was associated with strong eastward flows. The West Mid-Atlantic Ridge Survey showed a weak and poorly resolved meander structure between the APF and the SPF. During the first eight days of the survey the oceanographic conditions at the Central Station at 12°40'W remained reasonably constant. However after that, conditions became more variable in the thermocline with conspicuous temperature inversions and interleavings and also a decrease in temperature in the surface layer. At the very end of the period of observation the conditions in the thermocline returned to being similar to those observed during the early part of the period with however the mixed layer temperature raised. The period of enhanced thermohaline variability was accompanied by increased currents. The Georgia Basin Survey showed a very strong zonal jet at its northern edge which connects to a large cyclonic meander that itself joins an anticyclonic eddy in the southeastern quadrant. The water mass contrasts in this survey were stronger than in the West Mid-Atlantic Ridge Survey, but similar to those met along 10°E with the exception that the warm and saline surface water typical of the northern side of the SAF was not covered by the Georgia Basin Survey. Mixed layers found during Eddy-Pump were typically deep, but varied between the three survey areas; the mean depths and standard variations of the mixed layer along the 10°E were 77.2±24.7 m, at the West Mid-Atlantic Ridge 66.7±17.7 m, and in the Georgia Basin 36.8±10.7 m.
    Keywords: AWI_PhyOce; Physical Oceanography @ AWI
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-03-23
    Description: This data set was obtained during the R. V. POLARSTERN cruise ANT-XXVIII/3. Current velocities were measured nearly continuously when outside territorial waters along the ship's track with a vessel-mounted TRD Instruments' 153.6-kHz Ocean Surveyor ADCP. The transducers were located 11 m below the water line and were protected against ice floes by an acoustically transparent plastic window. The current measurements were made using a pulse of 2s and vertical bin length of 4 m. The ship's velocity was calculated from position fixes obtained by the Global Positioning System (GPS). Heading, roll and pitch data from the ship's gyro platforms and the navigation data were used to convert the ADCP velocities into earth coordinates. Accuracy of the ADCP velocities mainly depends on the quality of the position fixes and the ship's heading data. Further errors stem from a misalignment of the transducer with the ship's centerline. The ADCP data were processed using the Ocean Surveyor Sputum Interpreter (OSSI) software developed by GEOMAR Helmholtz-Zentrum für Ozeanforschung Kiel. The averaging interval was set to 120 seconds. The reference layer was set to bins 5 to 16 avoiding near surface effects and biases near bin 1. Sampling interval setting: 2s; Number of bins: 80; Bin length: 4m; Pulse length: 4m; Blank beyond transmit length: 4m. Data processing setting: Top reference bin: 5; Bottom reference bin: 16; Average: 120s; Misalignment amplitude: 1.0276 +/- 0.1611, phase: 0.8100 +/- 0.7190. The precision for single ping and 4m cell size reported by TRDI is 0.30m/s. Resulting from the single ping precision and the number of pings (most of the time 36) during 120seconds the velocity accuracy is nearly 0.05m/s. (Velocity accuracy = single ping precision divided by square root of the number of pings).
    Keywords: Acoustic Doppler Current Profiling (ADCP), TRDI Ocean Surveyor, 153.6 kHz; ANT-XXVIII/3; AWI_PhyOce; CT; Current velocity, east-west; Current velocity, north-south; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Physical Oceanography @ AWI; Polarstern; PS79; PS79/3-track; Quality; South Atlantic Ocean; Underway cruise track measurements
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 9807327 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-03-23
    Keywords: ANT-XXVIII/3; Attenuation, optical beam transmission; AWI_PhyOce; Calculated; Computed; Conductivity; CTD, SEA-BIRD SBE 911plus, SN T5027-C1199; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Date/Time of event; Density, sigma-theta (0); DEPTH, water; Elevation of event; Event label; Fluorometer; Fluorometer, WET Labs ECO AFL/FL; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Number of observations; Physical Oceanography @ AWI; Polarstern; Pressure, water; PS79; PS79/056-1; PS79/057-1; PS79/057-4; PS79/058-1; PS79/059-1; PS79/060-1; PS79/060-5; PS79/061-1; PS79/062-1; PS79/063-2; PS79/063-3; PS79/064-1; PS79/065-1; PS79/066-1; PS79/066-4; PS79/067-1; PS79/069-1; PS79/069-2; PS79/069-5; PS79/070-3; PS79/071-1; PS79/072-1; PS79/072-3; PS79/073-2; PS79/074-1; PS79/075-1; PS79/075-9; PS79/076-2; PS79/077-1; PS79/078-1; PS79/078-4; PS79/079-1; PS79/080-1; PS79/081-1; PS79/081-11; PS79/081-14; PS79/081-5; PS79/082-1; PS79/083-1; PS79/084-1; PS79/084-12; PS79/084-17; PS79/084-27; PS79/084-9; PS79/085-3; PS79/085-7; PS79/085-8; PS79/085-9; PS79/086-16; PS79/086-18; PS79/086-2; PS79/086-31; PS79/086-6; PS79/087-2; PS79/088-1; PS79/091-1; PS79/091-12; PS79/091-5; PS79/093-1; PS79/093-4; PS79/095-1; PS79/095-3; PS79/096-1; PS79/098-3; PS79/098-7; PS79/098-9; PS79/101-1; PS79/102-1; PS79/102-3; PS79/103-1; PS79/104-1; PS79/105-1; PS79/106-1; PS79/106-4; PS79/107-1; PS79/108-1; PS79/109-1; PS79/110-1; PS79/111-1; PS79/112-1; PS79/114-11; PS79/114-2; PS79/114-7; PS79/115-1; PS79/115-4; PS79/116-1; PS79/117-1; PS79/118-1; PS79/119-1; PS79/119-3; PS79/120-1; PS79/121-1; PS79/122-2; PS79/123-1; PS79/124-1; PS79/125-1; PS79/126-1; PS79/127-2; PS79/128-10; PS79/128-14; PS79/128-5; PS79/128-7; PS79/129-1; PS79/130-1; PS79/131-1; PS79/132-1; PS79/133-1; PS79/134-1; PS79/136-1; PS79/136-5; PS79/136-8; PS79/137-10; PS79/137-4; PS79/137-7; PS79/138-2; PS79/139-12; PS79/139-3; PS79/139-6; PS79/140-12; PS79/140-2; PS79/140-7; PS79/141-1; PS79/142-1; PS79/143-1; PS79/144-1; PS79/144-2; PS79/145-1; PS79/146-1; PS79/147-1; PS79/148-1; PS79/149-1; PS79/150-1; PS79/151-1; PS79/152-1; PS79/153-1; PS79/154-1; PS79/155-1; PS79/156-1; PS79/157-1; PS79/158-1; PS79/159-1; PS79/160-1; PS79/161-1; PS79/162-2; PS79/163-1; PS79/164-1; PS79/165-5; PS79/166-1; PS79/167-1; PS79/168-1; PS79/169-1; PS79/170-1; PS79/171-1; PS79/172-1; PS79/173-1; PS79/174-20; PS79/174-22; PS79/174-6; PS79/174-9; PS79/175-1; Salinity; South Atlantic Ocean; Temperature, water; Temperature, water, potential; Transmissometer, WET Labs, C-Star
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 2722263 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2017-05-03
    Description: The physical and biological carbon pumps in the different hydrographic and biogeochemical regimes of the Atlantic Sector of the Southern Ocean are controlled by a series of coupled physical, chemical and biological processes and a project named Eddy-Pump was designed to study them. The Eddy Pump field campaign was carried out during RV Polarstern Cruise ANT-XXVIII/3 between January and March 2012. Particular emphasis was laid on the differences which occur along the axis of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) with its associated mesoscale eddy field. The study sites were selected in order to represent: 1) the central ACC with its regular separation in different frontal jets, investigated by a meridional transect along 10°E; 2) a large-scale bloom west of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge which lasted several months with conspicuous chlorophyll-poor waters to its immediate east studied by a three-dimensional mesoscale survey centred at 12°40'W; and 3) the Georgia Basin north of the island of South Georgia, which regularly features an extended and dense phytoplankton bloom, was investigated by a mesoscale survey centred at 38°12'W. While Eddy-Pump represents an interdisciplinary project by design, we here focus on describing the variable physical environment within which the different biogeochemical regimes developed. For describing the physical environment we use measurements of temperature, salinity and density, of mixed-layer turbulence parameters, of dynamic heights and horizontal current vectors, and of flow trajectories obtained from surface drifters and submerged floats. This serves as background information for the analyses of biological and chemical processes and of biogeochemical fluxes addressed by other papers in this issue. The Section along 10°E between 44°S and 53°S showed a classical ACC structure with well-known hydrographic fronts, the Subantarctic Front (SAF) at 46.5°S, the Antarctic Polar Front (APF) split in two, at 49.25°S and 50.5°S, and the Southern Polar Front (SPF) at 52.5°S. Each front was associated with strong eastward flows. The West Mid-Atlantic Ridge Survey showed a weak and poorly resolved meander structure between the APF and the SPF. During the first eight days of the survey the oceanographic conditions at the Central Station at 12°40’W remained reasonably constant. However after that, conditions became more variable in the thermocline with conspicuous temperature inversions and interleavings and also a decrease in temperature in the surface layer. At the very end of the period of observation the conditions in the thermocline returned to being similar to those observed during the early part of the period with however the mixed layer temperature raised. The period of enhanced thermohaline variability was accompanied by increased currents . The Georgia Basin Survey showed a very strong zonal jet at its northern edge which connects to a large cyclonic meander that itself joins an anticyclonic eddy in the southeastern quadrant. The water mass contrasts in this survey were stronger than in the West Mid-Atlantic Ridge Survey, but similar to those met along 10°E with the exception that the warm and saline surface water typical of the northern side of the SAF was not covered by the Georgia Basin Survey. Mixed layers found during Eddy-Pump were typically deep, but varied between the three survey areas; the mean depths and standard variations of the mixed layer along the 10°E were 77.2 ± 24.7 m, at the West Mid-Atlantic Ridge 66.7 ± 17.7 m, and in the Georgia Basin 36.8 ± 10.7 m.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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