142 research outputs found
Contributions to the understanding of meso/submesoscale turbulence and their impact on the ocean functioning
The ocean is variable on a broad range of scales and for a variety of reasons. The role of mesoscale subinertial currents has been known for a long time to be an important aspect of the ocean circulation. At the other end of the spectrum superinertial motions (near-inertial waves, inertial-gravity waves) are also important to the ocean functioning. In between, subinertial turbulent processes termed “submesoscale” exist, with time and space scales that largely overlap with those of superinertial motions. Submesoscale activity results from the intensification of fronts in the upper ocean. In this manuscript I strive to describe my research contribution from 1998 to 2015 on mesoscale and submesoscale turbulence. Some of their interactions with superinertial processes on which I have also worked are also discussed. This work is put into the proper scientific context through a substantial review effort.L'océan est variable sur une large gamme d' échelles et pour une variété de raisons. Le rôle des courants subinertiels mésoéchelle est connu depuis longtemps pour être un aspect important de la circulation océanique. A l'autre extrémité des spectre en échelles, les mouvements superinertiels (ondes quasi-inertielles, ondes d'inertie-gravité) sont également importants pour le fonctionnement de l'océan. Entre les deux existent des processus turbulents subinertiels appelés "sous-mésoéchelle", dont les échelles de temps et d'espace recouvrent en grande partie celles des mouvements superinertiels. L'activité sous-mésoéchelle résulte de l'intensification des fronts dans l'océan supérieur. Dans ce manuscrit, je présente ma contribution à la recherche sur la turbulence mésoéchelle et sous-mésoéchelle. Certaines de leurs interactions avec les processus superinertiels sur lesquelles j'ai récemment travaillé sont également discutées. Ces travaux sont mis en perspective grâce à un effort de revue couvrant l'essentiel des études produites depuis 20 ans sur les sujets concernées
Dissipation of the energy imparted by mid-latitude storms in the Southern Ocean
The aim of this study is to clarify the role of the Southern Ocean storms on interior mixing and meridional overturning circulation. A periodic and idealized numerical model has been designed to represent the key physical processes of a zonal portion of the Southern Ocean located between 70 and 40°?S. It incorporates physical ingredients deemed essential for Southern Ocean functioning: rough topography, seasonally varying air–sea fluxes, and high-latitude storms with analytical form. The forcing strategy ensures that the time mean wind stress is the same between the different simulations, so the effect of the storms on the mean wind stress and resulting impacts on the Southern Ocean dynamics are not considered in this study. Level and distribution of mixing attributable to high-frequency winds are quantified and compared to those generated by eddy–topography interactions and dissipation of the balanced flow. Results suggest that (1) the synoptic atmospheric variability alone can generate the levels of mid-depth dissipation frequently observed in the Southern Ocean (10?10–10?9?W?kg?1) and (2) the storms strengthen the overturning, primarily through enhanced mixing in the upper 300?m, whereas deeper mixing has a minor effect. The sensitivity of the results to horizontal resolution (20, 5, 2 and 1?km), vertical resolution and numerical choices is evaluated. Challenging issues concerning how numerical models are able to represent interior mixing forced by high-frequency winds are exposed and discussed, particularly in the context of the overturning circulation. Overall, submesoscale-permitting ocean modeling exhibits important delicacies owing to a lack of convergence of key components of its energetics even when reaching ?x?=??1?km
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Eddy properties in the California Current System
Eddy detection and tracking algorithms are applied to both satellite altimetry and a
high‐resolution (dx = 5 km) climatological model solution of the U.S. West Coast to study
the properties of surface and undercurrent eddies in the California Current System.
Eddy properties show remarkable similarity in space and time, and even somewhat in
polarity. Summer and fall are the most active seasons for undercurrent eddy generation,
while there is less seasonal variation at surface. Most of the eddies have radii in the range
of 25–100 km, sea level anomaly amplitudes of 1–4 cm, and vorticity normalized by
ƒ amplitudes of 0.025–0.2. Many of the eddies formed near the coast travel considerable
distance westward with speeds about 2 km/day, consistent with the β effect. Anticyclones
and cyclones show equatorward and poleward displacements, respectively. Long‐lived
surface eddies show a cyclonic dominance. The subsurface California Undercurrent
generates more long‐lived anticyclones than cyclones through instabilities and
topographic/coastline effects. In contrast, surface eddies and subsurface cyclones have
much more widely distributed birth sites. The majority of the identified eddies have
lifetimes less than a season. Eddies extend to 800–1500 m depth and have distinctive
vertical structures for cyclones and anticyclones. Eddies show high nonlinearity
(rotation speed higher than propagation speed) and hence can be efficient in
transporting materials offshore
Voxel-based assessments of treatment effects on longitudinal brain changes in the Multidomain Alzheimer Preventive Trial cohort
International audienceObjective: The Multidomain Alzheimer Preventive Trial (MAPT) was designed to assess the effect of omega-3 supplementation and a multidomain intervention (physical activity, cognitive training and nutritional advice) on cognitive decline of people with subjective memory complaint. In term of cognitive testing, no significant effect on cognitive decline was found over the 3-year follow-up. Yet, in the context of dementia-related conditions, brain morphological changes can be used to foretell the cognitive evolution. In this paper, we evaluate the effect of the interventions on the evolution of the brain morphology using the MR images acquired during MAPT. Methods: Subjects in the MAPT cohort with two MRI acquisitions, at baseline and at 36 months, were included , resulting in a subset of 376 subjects distributed in the 4 intervention groups: multidomain intervention plus omega-3, multidomain intervention plus placebo, omega-3 alone, and placebo alone. The morphological changes were assessed from volume measurements of regions of interest and a voxel-wise deformation-based approach. The primary outcome is the longitudinal deformation observed between the baseline image and the 3-year follow-up. Results: The multi-domain intervention is associated with a significant effect on the 3-year morphological evolution. The effect is similar within the two groups undergoing the intervention regardless of the omega-3 or placebo treatment. The voxel-wise deformation-based approach shows that the differences are mainly located in the left peri-ventricular area next to the temporoparietal junction (TPJ). These morphological changes correspond to a slower morphological evolution and are correlated with a better performance in cognitive assessments. These results could not be observed using the volumetric morphometry approach. No effect of omega-3 was observed.Discussion: In this study, we found that the multidomain intervention has a significant effect on morphological changes that are usually associated with the cognitive decline. This result suggests that effects at the level of cognitive decline may be visible in the long term, and that the cognitive scores may not be powerful enough to detect changes after 3 years. We argue that the use of neuroimaging could help define whether early intervention strategies are effective to delay cognitive decline and dementia
Vortex merger near a topographic slope in a homogeneous rotating fluid
This work is a contribution to the PHYSINDIEN research program. It was supported by CNRS-RFBR contract PRC 1069/16-55-150001.The effect of a bottom slope on the merger of two identical Rankine vortices is investigated in a two dimensional, quasi-geostrophic, incompressible fluid. When two cyclones initially lie parallel to the slope, and more than two vortex diameters away from the slope, the critical merger distance is unchanged. When the cyclones are closer to the slope, they can merge at larger distances, but they lose more mass into filaments, thus weakening the efficiency of merger. Several effects account for this: the topographic Rossby wave advects the cyclones, reduces their mutual distance and deforms them. This along shelf wave breaks into filaments and into secondary vortices which shear out the initial cyclones. The global motion of fluid towards the shallow domain and the erosion of the two cyclones are confirmed by the evolution of particles seeded both in the cyclone sand near the topographic slope. The addition of tracer to the flow indicates that diffusion is ballistic at early times. For two anticyclones, merger is also facilitated because one vortex is ejected offshore towards the other, via coupling with a topographic cyclone. Again two anticyclones can merge at large distance but they are eroded in the process. Finally, for taller topographies, the critical merger distance is again increased and the topographic influence can scatter or completely erode one of the two initial cyclones. Conclusions are drawn on possible improvements of the model configuration for an application to the ocean.PostprintPeer reviewe
SEASTAR: a mission to study ocean submesoscale dynamics and small-scale atmosphere-ocean processes in coastal, shelf and polar seas
High-resolution satellite images of ocean color and sea surface temperature reveal an abundance of ocean fronts, vortices and filaments at scales below 10 km but measurements of ocean surface dynamics at these scales are rare. There is increasing recognition of the role played by small scale ocean processes in ocean-atmosphere coupling, upper-ocean mixing and ocean vertical transports, with advanced numerical models and in situ observations highlighting fundamental changes in dynamics when scales reach 1 km. Numerous scientific publications highlight the global impact of small oceanic scales on marine ecosystems, operational forecasts and long-term climate projections through strong ageostrophic circulations, large vertical ocean velocities and mixed layer re-stratification. Small-scale processes particularly dominate in coastal, shelf and polar seas where they mediate important exchanges between land, ocean, atmosphere and the cryosphere, e.g., freshwater, pollutants. As numerical models continue to evolve toward finer spatial resolution and increasingly complex coupled atmosphere-wave-ice-ocean systems, modern observing capability lags behind, unable to deliver the high-resolution synoptic measurements of total currents, wind vectors and waves needed to advance understanding, develop better parameterizations and improve model validations, forecasts and projections. SEASTAR is a satellite mission concept that proposes to directly address this critical observational gap with synoptic two-dimensional imaging of total ocean surface current vectors and wind vectors at 1 km resolution and coincident directional wave spectra. Based on major recent advances in squinted along-track Synthetic Aperture Radar interferometry, SEASTAR is an innovative, mature concept with unique demonstrated capabilities, seeking to proceed toward spaceborne implementation within Europe and beyond
Paleoenvironnements et diagenese argileuse dans le domaine Caraiebe au Cenozoieque
SIGLEINIST T 73486 / INIST-CNRS - Institut de l'Information Scientifique et TechniqueFRFranc
Génération de tourbillons océaniques par déstabilisation de courants de bord
BREST-BU Droit-Sciences-Sports (290192103) / SudocSudocFranceF
Decarbonization of academic laboratories: On the trade-offs between CO<sub>2</sub> emissions, spending, and research output
International audienc
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