167 research outputs found
On the hyperbolicity of the bulk air-sea heat flux functions: Insights into the efficiency of air-sea moisture disequilibrium for tropical cyclone intensification
Sea-to-air heat fluxes are the energy source for tropical cyclone (TC) development and maintenance. In the bulk aerodynamic formulas, these fluxes are a function of surface wind speed U10 and air-sea temperature and moisture disequilibrium (ΔT and Δq, respectively). Although many studies have explained TC intensification through the mutual dependence between increasing U10 and increasing sea-to-air heat fluxes, recent studies have found that TC intensification can occur through deep convective vortex structures that obtain their local buoyancy from sea-to-air moisture fluxes, even under conditions of relatively low wind. Herein, a new perspective on the bulk aerodynamic formulas is introduced to evaluate the relative contribution of wind-driven (U10) and thermodynamically driven (ΔT and Δq) ocean heat uptake. Previously unnoticed salient properties of these formulas, reported here, are as follows: 1) these functions are hyperbolic and 2) increasing Δq is an efficient mechanism for enhancing the fluxes. This new perspective was used to investigate surface heat fluxes in six TCs during phases of steady-state intensity (SS), slow intensification (SI), and rapid intensification (RI). A capping of wind-driven heat uptake was found during periods of SS, SI, and RI. Compensation by larger values of Δq . 5 gkg-1 at moderate values of U10 led to intense inner-core moisture fluxes of greater than 600Wm22 during RI. Peak values in Δq preferentially occurred over oceanic regimes with higher sea surface temperature (SST) and upper-ocean heat content. Thus, increasing SST and Δq is a very effective way to increase surface heat fluxes-this can easily be achieved as a TC moves over deeper warm oceanic regimes
Wind Speed Dependence of Single-Site Wave-Height Retrievals from High-Frequency Radars
Wave-height observations derived from single-site high-frequency (HF) radar backscattered Doppler spectra are generally recognized to be less accurate than overlapping radar techniques but can provide significantly larger sampling regions. The larger available wave-sampling region may have important implications for observing system design. Comparison of HF radar–derived wave heights with acoustic Doppler profiler and buoy data revealed that the scale separation between the Bragg scattering waves and the peak energy-containing waves may contribute to errors in the single-site estimates in light-to-moderate winds. A wave-height correction factor was developed that explicitly considers this scale separation and eliminates the trend of increasing errors with increasing wind speed
Development of a National Pain Management Competency Profile to Guide Entry-Level Physiotherapy Education in Canada
Background
National strategies from North America call for substantive improvements in entry-level pain management education to help reduce the burden of chronic pain. Past work has generated a valuable set of interprofessional pain management competencies to guide the education of future health professionals. However, there has been very limited work that has explored the development of such competencies for individual professions in different regions. Developing profession-specific competencies tailored to the local context is a necessary first step to integrate them within local regulatory systems. Our group is working toward this goal within the context of entry-level physiotherapy (PT) programs across Canada. Aims
This study aimed to create a consensus-based competency profile for pain management, specific to the Canadian PT context. Methods
A modified Delphi design was used to achieve consensus across Canadian university-based and clinical pain educators. Results
Representatives from 14 entry-level PT programs (93% of Canadian programs) and six clinical educators were recruited. After two rounds, a total of 15 competencies reached the predetermined endorsement threshold (75%). Most participants (85%) reported being “very satisfied” with the process. Conclusions
This process achieved consensus on a novel pain management competency profile specific to the Canadian PT context. The resulting profile delineates the necessary abilities required by physiotherapists to manage pain upon entry to practice. Participants were very satisfied with the process. This study also contributes to the emerging literature on integrated research in pain management by profiling research methodology that can be used to inform related work in other health professions and regions
The James Webb Space Telescope Mission
Twenty-six years ago a small committee report, building on earlier studies,
expounded a compelling and poetic vision for the future of astronomy, calling
for an infrared-optimized space telescope with an aperture of at least .
With the support of their governments in the US, Europe, and Canada, 20,000
people realized that vision as the James Webb Space Telescope. A
generation of astronomers will celebrate their accomplishments for the life of
the mission, potentially as long as 20 years, and beyond. This report and the
scientific discoveries that follow are extended thank-you notes to the 20,000
team members. The telescope is working perfectly, with much better image
quality than expected. In this and accompanying papers, we give a brief
history, describe the observatory, outline its objectives and current observing
program, and discuss the inventions and people who made it possible. We cite
detailed reports on the design and the measured performance on orbit.Comment: Accepted by PASP for the special issue on The James Webb Space
Telescope Overview, 29 pages, 4 figure
Observational/numerical study of the upper ocean response to hurricanes.
http://archive.org/details/observationalnum00shayNAN
Observations of inertio-gravity waves in the wake of hurricane Frederic.
Provider: Biodiversity Heritage Library - Institution: Naval Postgraduate School - Data provided by Europeana Collections- All metadata published by Europeana are available free of restriction under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. However, Europeana requests that you actively acknowledge and give attribution to all metadata sources including EuropeanaThesis (M.S. in Ocean.)--Naval Postgraduate School, 198
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Ocean-atmosphere interactions in tropical cyclones
Over the past two decades, there has been increased interest in not only understanding the ocean response to tropical cyclone (TC) forcing, but the impact of the ocean on intensity and structural change in the TC itself. The oceanic response has been primarily studied in the context of the baroclinic wake left by TC's and the forced near-inertial waves as observed in Gilbert (88), Frances, and Ivan (04). This cold wake structure and the negative feedback are due to ocean mixed layer cooling by shear-induced vertical mixing by near-inertial motions forced by TC momentum flux. That is, the strong shears lower the Richardson numbers to below criticality that forces the entrainment of cooler water from the seasonal thermocline that may lead to TC weakening. Notwithstanding, in some oceanic regimes these cold wakes (>2ºC) simply do not develop over deep warm oceanic features. Background oceanic states impact upper ocean thermal response where the warm layers are deeper and currents transport warm water poleward as part of the gyre circulation as suggested by measurements in Isidore and Lili (02), Katrina and Rita (05), and Gustav and Ike (08) over the Loop Current. In these regimes, the wind-driven shears do not develop and essentially keep the oceanic mixed layer warm with high oceanic heat content levels (>100 kJ cm-2) during TC passage. The implication is a more sustained enthalpy flux to the atmospheric boundary layer, thus representing an important heat and moisture source for deepening of TCs.In this broader context, recent studies have shown the surface drag coefficient to level off between 28 to 33 m s-1 at values from 2.4 to 3.4 x 10-3. For intense TCs, the theoretical ratio of the enthalpy and surface drag coefficient ranges exceeds unity (typically 1.2 to 1.5), and when this ratio is less than unity, studies suggest that TCs cannot reach their maximum intensity. The important point here is that these fluids are coupled if we ever expect a more accurate intensity forecast, the enthalpy fluxes (and aerodynamic transfer coefficients) must be correct
NA
http://archive.org/details/observationsofin00shayNAN
Free Surface Effects on the Near-Inertial Ocean Current Response to a Hurricane
During the passage of hurricane Frederic in 1979, four ocean current meter arrays in water depths of 100-
950 m detected both a barociinic and a depth-independent response in the near-inertial frequency band. Although
the oceanic response was predominately barociinic, the hurricane excited a depth-independent component of
5-11 cm S-I.
The origin and role of the depth-independent component of velocity is investigated using a linear analytical
model and numerical simulations from a 17-level primitive equation model with a free surface. Both models
are forced with an idealized wind stress pattern based on the observed storm parameters in hurricane Frederic.
In an analytical model, the Green's function (Ko) is convolved with the wind stress curl to predict a sea surface
depression of approximately 20 cm from the equilibrium position. The near-inertial velocities are simulated by
convolving the slope of the sea surface depression with a second Green's function. The barotropic current
velocities rotate inertially with periods shifted above the local inertial period by I %-2% and the maximum
amplitude of II cm S-I is displaced to the right of the track at x = 2Rmax (radius of maximum winds).
The free surface depression simulated by the primitive-equation model is also about 18-20 cm. The primitive
equation model simulations indicate that the vertical mean pressure gradient excites 10-11 cm S-I depthaveraged
currents atx = 3Rmax . The net divergence and convergence of the horizontal velocities induces vertical
deflections of the sea surface. The spatial pattern of the barotropic amplitudes simulated by the numerical and
analytical models differ by less than 2 cm S-I in the region 0 which suggests that the barotropic
response to the passage of a moving hurricane is governed by linear processes
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