Sensitivity of a general circulation inverse model to sub-grid scale parametrization coefficients
Sensitivity of a general circulation inverse model to sub-grid scale parametrization coefficients
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10.1575/1912/5555
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Ocean circulation
Abstract
Ocean modellers seek to understand the circulation of the oceans, or portions thereof,
by developing models of the ocean they can solve. This tractability constraint forces
ocean modellers to make choices. Naturally, they hope to make intelligent choices,
but whenever a new model is being developed or an existing one extended, the issue
of tractability lurks.
The large-scale, basin-wide, circulation of the oceans can be divided into two
components, classified by their driving force. The wind-driven circulation, whose flow
occurs mainly above the thermocline, was first explained qualitatively by Stommel
(1948) with a simple, elegant analytical model. The other component of the oceans'
circulation, the density-driven, or thermohaline circulation, flows below the thermocline.
Again, the first simple analytical model for the deep thermohaline flow was
proposed by Stommel (1958) and developed by Stommel and Aarons (1959) whose
basic ideas underlie even the most recent conceptual models of the large-scale circulation.
The details of the thermohaline circulation and its interaction with the
wind-driven circulation in a realistic ocean basin is a problem which is not tractable
analytically. This has driven ocean modellers interested in this aspect of the oceans'
circulation to numerical models: ocean circulation models.
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Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution August 1994
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Won, E. C. (1994). Sensitivity of a general circulation inverse model to sub-grid scale parametrization coefficients [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/5555