Dissipation measurements using temperature microstructure from an underwater glider.
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Date
2014Author
Peterson, Algot K.
Ilker, Fer
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Microstructure measurements of temperature and current shear are made using an autonomous underwater glider. The glider is equipped with fast-response thermistors and airfoil shearprobes, providing measurements of dissipation rate of temperature
variance, χ, and of turbulent kinetic energy, ε, respectively. Furthermore, by fitting the temperature gradient variance spectra to a theoretical model, an independent measurement of ε is obtained.Both Batchelor (εB) and Kraichnan (εK) theoretical forms are used.Shear probe measurements are reported elsewhere; here, the thermistor-derived εB and εK are compared to the shearprobe results, demonstrating the possibility of dissipation measurements using gliders equipped with thermistors only. A total of 152 dive and climb profiles are used, collected during a one-week mission in the Faroe Bank Channel, sampling the turbulent dense overflow plume and the ambient water above.Measurement of ε with thermistors using a glider requires careful consider.....
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Publisher: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211122014000231?via%3DihubJournal
Methods in OceanographyVolume
10Page Range
pp.44-69Document Language
enMaturity Level
TRL 5 System/subsystem/component validation in relevant environmentBest Practice Type
GuideSpatial Coverage
Faroe Bank ChannelDOI Original
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mio.2014.05.002Citation
Peterson, A.K. and Ilke, F. (2014) Dissipation measurements using temperature microstructure from an underwater glider. Methods in Oceanography, 10, pp.44-69. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mio.2014.05.002.Collections
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