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Earth Rotation

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Earth rotates about the sun (2p rad/365.25 day) Relative to the 'distant stars' (2p rad/86164 s) ... Az is at its greatest in the mixed layer. Review ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Earth Rotation


1
Earth Rotation
  • Earths rotation gives rise to a fictitious force
    called the Coriolis force
  • It accounts for the apparent deflection of
    motions viewed in our rotating frame
  • Analogies
  • throwing a ball from a merry-go-round
  • sending a ball to the sun

2
Earth Rotation
  • Earth rotates about its axis wrt sun (2p rad/day)
  • Earth rotates about the sun (2p rad/365.25 day)
  • Relative to the distant stars (2p rad/86164 s)
  • Sidereal day 86164 sec (Note 24 h 86400 sec)
  • Defines the Earths rotation frequency, W
  • W 7.29 x 10-5 s-1 (radians per sec)

3
Earth Rotation
  • Velocity of Earth surface
  • Ve(Eq) Re W
  • Re radius Earth (6371 km)
  • Ve(Eq) 464 m/s
  • As latitude, f, increases, Ve(f) will decrease
  • Ve(f) W Re cos(f)

4
Ve Decreases with Latitude
  • Ve(f) W Re cos(f)

5
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6
Earth Rotation
  • Moving objects on Earth move with the rotating
    frame (Ve(f)) relative to it (vrel)
  • The absolute velocity is vabs vrel Ve(f)
  • Objects moving north from Equator will have a
    larger Ve than that under them
  • If real forces sum to 0, vabs will not change,
    but the Ve(f) at that latitude will

7
Rotation, cont.
  • Frictionless object moving north
  • vabs const., but Ve(f) is decreasing
  • vrel must increase (pushing the object east)
  • When viewed in the rotating frame, moving objects
    appear deflected to right (left SH)
  • Coriolis force accounts for this by proving a
    force acting to the right of motion

8
Coriolis Force
an object with an initial east-west velocity will
maintain that velocity, even as it passes over
surfaces with different velocities. As a
result, it appears to be deflected over that
surface (right in NH, left in SH)
9
Coriolis Force and Deflection of Flight Path
10
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11
  • http//www.icess.ucsb.edu/davey/Geog163_S2006/cor
    iolis.mov

12
Earth Rotation
  • Motions in a rotating frame will appear to
    deflect to the right (NH)
  • Deflection will be to the right in the northern
    hemisphere to left in southern hemisphere
  • No apparent deflection right on the equator
  • Its a matter of frame of reference,
    there is NO Coriolis force

13
Wind Stress
  • Wind stress, tw, accounts for the input of
    momentum into the ocean by the wind
  • Exact processes creating tw is complex
  • tw is a tangential force per unit area
  • Units are Newton (force) pre meter squared
  • F ma -gt 1 Newton 1 N 1 kg (m s-2)
  • N m-2 kg m-1 s-2

14
Wind Stress
  • Wind stress is modeled as tw C U2
  • where C 2x10-3 U is wind speed
  • Values of C can vary by factor of 2

15
Wind Stress
  • Calculations
  • If U 15 knots, what is the wind stress?
  • Steps
  • Convert U in knots to U in m/s
  • Calculate tw

16
Wind Stress
  • Facts
  • 1o latitude 60 nautical miles 111 km
  • 15 knots 15 nautical miles / hour

17
Wind Stress
  • Finishing up the calculation...
  • tw C U2
  • (2x10-3) (7.7 m/s)2
  • 0.12 N/m2
  • Were done!!
  • But what were the units of C?

18
What are the units of C?
  • We know that tw C U2
  • tw N/m2 kg m-1 s-2 U2 (m/s)2
  • C kg m-1 s-2 / m 2 s-2 kg m-3
  • -gt C 2x10-3 kg m-3
  • Typically, C is defined as ra CD
  • ra density air CD drag coefficient

19
Wind Stress
  • Many processes contribute to transfer of momentum
    from wind to the ocean
  • Turbulent friction
  • Generation of wind waves
  • Generation of capillary waves
  • Key is the recognition that the process is
    turbulent

20
Wind Stress
  • Vertical eddy viscosity quantifies the air-sea
    exchanges of horizontal momentum

21
Vertical Eddy Viscosity
  • Vertical eddy viscosity, Az, controls the
    efficiency of wind momentum inputs
  • High values of Az suggest deeper penetration of
    momentum into the ocean
  • Values of Az are functions of
  • turbulence levels
  • wave state
  • stratification near the surface

22
Vertical Eddy Viscosity
  • Similar to discussion of eddy diffusion
    (turbulence mixes scalars momentum similarly)
  • Values of Az (vertical) ltlt Ah (horizontal)
  • Az decreases as stratification increases
  • Az is at its greatest in the mixed layer

23
Review
  • Wind stress accounts for the input of momentum
    into the ocean by the wind
  • Calculated using wind speed, tw C U2
  • Processes driving wind stress vertical eddy
    viscosity are very complex

24
Ekman Transport
  • Ekman transport is the direct wind driven
    transport of seawater
  • Boundary layer process
  • Steady balance among the wind stress, vertical
    eddy viscosity Coriolis forces
  • Story starts with Fridtjof Nansen 1898
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