Analyses of surface meteorological fields over the northwestern Gulf of Mexico and wind effects on the circulation over the Latex shelf /

There were three objectives in this research. The first was

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wang, Wensu, 1962-
Format: Thesis Book
Language:English
Published: [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified] ; 1996.
Subjects:
Online Access:http://proxy.library.tamu.edu/login?url=http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=739364141&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=2945&RQT=309&VName=PQD
Description
Summary:There were three objectives in this research. The first was
to formulate surface meteorological fields from in situ,
time series of observations over the Texas-Louisiana
continental shelf for a period from April 1992 to November
1994. The second objective was to compare resulting wind
fields (LATEX fields) with simultaneous wind fields produced
from the NMC weather prediction model and observed by ERS-1
satellite scatterometer. The third objective was to examine
the response of nearshore currents to alongshore winds over
the shelf region and further determine response time and
spatial extent of response. The results of wind comparisons
showed that the NMC winds were larger (about 2 m/s) than the
LATEX winds and had 10 degree bias in direction. Large
differences between the two wind sets occurred in the
central area of the shelf. Fronts in the NMC wind fields
usually moved faster than in the LATEX fields. The LATEX
winds were only slightly larger than ERS-1 winds (less than
2 m/s) and there was no bias for wind directions between the
two data sets. The comparisons indicated that the LATEX
wind fields provided realistic and detailed surface winds
that are good for the study of mesoscale processes over the
Texas-Louisiana continental shelf. Monthly and seasonal mean
surface meteorological fields showed that there are two
principal patterns for surface atmosphere over the shelf
region: summer and nonsummer. From June to August, surface
atmosphere is relatively stable and alongshore is upcoast
wind component is upcoast (from Brownsville to Mississippi
Delta). In the remaining months, surface atmosphere has
great variability and alongshore wind component is generally
downcoast. The response of nearshore currents to alongshore
winds was examined at low frequency and short term temporal
scales. Results showed that alongshore wind component is
the principal force for alongshore currents over the inner
shelf. Large crosscorrelation (0-5-0.6) between alongshore
current and wind components and short response time (4-5
hours) occurred over the shelf off the south Texas coast.
Crosscorrelation values decreased offshore and response time
increased upcoast to approximate 10 hours off the
Mississippi Delta. The area of significant correlation
between alongs-shore wind and current components was limited
to inshore of the 200-m isobath off Brownsville but only out
to the 20-m isobath off the Mississippi Delta.
Item Description:Vita.
"Major Subject: Oceanography".
Physical Description:xv, 122 leaves : illustrations ; 28 cm.
Issued also on microfiche from University Microfilms Inc.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references: pages 117-121.