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SEMINAR: MPO Seminar:Dr. Patrick Hogan,Tuesday,March 23 at 11:00 a.m.,Slab Seminar Room S/A 103
| From: | Sandrine Apelbaum <sapelbaum@rsmas.miami.edu> |
| Subject: | SEMINAR: MPO Seminar:Dr. Patrick Hogan,Tuesday,March 23 at 11:00 a.m.,Slab Seminar Room S/A 103 |
| Date: | Thu, 18 Mar 2010 10:53:55 -0400 |
MPO Seminar Dr. Patrick Hogan Open
Ocean Processes and Prediction Systems Section Naval
Research Laboratory - Stennis Space Center Room: Slab Seminar Room, S/A 103 Abstract: Some acoustic
sensor systems used by the Navy to protect ships from hostile threats are
air-dropped sonobuoys. Recently, new versions of these systems have required an
increase in “in-the-water” lifetime from 4-8 hours to 24-48 hours. Thus the new
systems greatly benefit from, and in some cases require, accurate knowledge of
the ocean currents in order for the buoy field to maintain optimal search
coverage. The ocean modeling component of this project includesassimilative
regional ocean forecasting (using the NCOM/NCODA system), hydromechanical
modeling for specific buoy types, and sonobuoy trajectory analyses such as
calculations of relative dispersion. Results from real-time support of two
sonobuoy deployment exercises will be discussed. In one exercise (2009),
real-time support from forecast systems with progressively finer horizontal
resolution (9, 3, 1 km) were provided, and those results demonstrate that an
accurate initial state is more important than horizontal resolution for a good
sonobuoy trajectory forecast. In the other exercise (2007), which was held in a
challenging environment near the Kuroshuio, ensembles have been used to
describe the trajectory drift uncertainity. As will be discussed, the “spread”
of the ensemble members is relatively small in the area of the Kuroshio north
of the Ryukyu Islands where the Kuroshio Current flows consistently towards the
northeast. The south side of the Ryukyu’s however is dominated by mesoscale
eddies, and as such the variability is much greater and the predictability much
more difficult, as evidenced by the large spread in the uncertainty envelope
outlined by the individual ensemble trajectories. Sandrine Apelbaum Meteorology and Physical Oceanography Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science University of Miami 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway Miami, FL 33149-1098 Tel (305) 421-4057 Fax (305) 421-4696 |
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