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OPTICAL ALTIMETRY: IMAGING THE PRESSURE, VELOCITY AND VORTICITY IN A
ROTATING FLUID
NEWS! A complete software package for analysis of AIV (color
altimetric images) is now available from Yakov Afanasyev, at the
Physics Department of Memorial University, St. Johns Newfoundland,
Canada. Once the
system is assembled (involving a color transparency and a light source
and camera mounted above the rotating table, or with mirror to double
the optical path, mounted at the height of the fluid), this software
makes efficient calculations of surface height field, geostrophic and
ageostrophic pressure and velocity, and vorticity and potential
vorticity. For examples see the recent JFM preprint of Afanasyev,
Rhines and Lindahl under Recent Papers on our library page, here.
Contact
yakov@physics.mun.ca, and on the web www.physics.mun.ca/~yakov/
GFD lab altimetric images of turbulent flow driven by buoyant central
source, color-coded
by slope (I. Afanasyev); Click to enlarge
above, vertical vorticity in cylinder wake
Image by P.Rhines, E.Lindahl; click to download animation, 1 Mb Quicktime
format
A new way of looking at rotating fluids
(here, color image above is the field of
surface elevation with baroclinic turbulence and jets due to a source of low-density water at the
center, on a laboratory polar beta-plane (North Pole at the center). Middle image is
vertical vorticity in cylinder
wake, left: 'eastward' translation of cylinder; right, 'westward' translation of cylinder;
black: cyclonic, white: anticyclonic.
Bottom image is a field of periodically-forced Rossby waves;
the amplitude of the surface height features ranges from 1 micron to 1
mm., shown with knife-edge optical altimetery as a side-lit image).
See Outputs link to find new manuscript.
(for discussion of Rossby waves
click
here.
For recent papers go to 'Outputs', here.
For a recently approved grant proposal describing developments and plans,
click here.
Standing Rossby waves in the lee of a spherical-cap
mountain
(at 2
o'clock) with particle streaks superimposed.
The grey-shading shows the pressure
field (the elevation of the water surface), which is also the
stream-function for the geostrophic flow. The flow is quasi-steady. 1
m. diameter cylinder with
paraboloidal free surface, rotating at 2.3 radians/sec. Driven by an
eastward (i.e., counter-clockwise) solid-body rotation of the fluid,
which is maintained by ramping down the table rotation rate.
The most energetic flow
features are the spiral jet/wake structure at the mountian. The
'tip-jet' at Cape Farewell Greenland may be an analogous feature from
the subpolar Atlantic. A 'Lighthill block' extends eastward around
circular latitude lines, upstream
of the mountain. Note the
ruddy moon-scape in this blocked region, which is a field of small
evaporative convection cells
('clouds' rotating cyclonically) east of the mountain, surrounded by
weak convective rolls in the region of shear.
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Personnel
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Surface waves generated by an oscillating bottom (click to enlarge)
Flows in hemispherical bubbles
Numerical simulations of induced mean flows due to ridges on the sea floor

Alejandro Selkirk Island, 33 46S, South Pacific
Island wake from Landsat7 (peaks to 1650m height)
The GFD lab moved in March 2000 to a new 1300 sq. ft facility in the newly
completed Ocean Sciences Building.
The lab has a specially constructed vibration isolation pad for the two large
rotating tables, with a high-bay extending nearly 30 feet upward, to facilitate
laser imaging of rotating fluid surface, photography and lighting. We have a
1100 sq ft. teaching laboratory in Ocean Teaching Building, where projects
courses, demonstrations and
school visits occur. There is a re-entrant pumped flume there, and an
estuary-model flume.
Parker MacCready ,
William Wilcock, and Alex
Horner-Devine, all have nearby fluids labs and related activities: a rare
concentration of real fluid experimentation. Not far away also is the
fluids lab
of Aero/Astronaut Bob
Breidenthal.
undular
bore two stories high, as one wall of the building.
Chlorophyll during late spring bloom round Tasmania
(27xi1981), 1 km resolution (Courtesy of CZCS/SeaWiFS projects)