Santa Barbara Channel CODAR Grid
This research seeks to determine optimal stochastic particle transport (i.e. Lagrangian) models for use in the coastal ocean. Circulation observations for the coastal ocean exist primarily in the form of time-averaged Eulerian fields. Many applied problems in coastal oceanography are concerned with how things are transported and where they go. Accurate Lagrangian stochastic transport models for the near-shore region are a necessary link between the copious Eulerian coastal circulation data from high frequency (HF) radar systems, and transport information required by coastal resource managers tasked with identifying the fate of pollutants, larvae, and objects lost-at-sea.
Specific research objectives are to:
- Observe surface flow fields in two coastal regions using HF radar and high-resolution drifters.
- Develop accurate Lagrangian transport models to predict trajectories from the HF radar fields.
- Model trajectories and quantify their skill through comparisons with in-situ drifter tracks.
- Compute redistribution kernel functions (RKFs), or connectivity matrices, and demonstrate their utility as simple probabilistic near-shore transport models.
The tracks observed during this set of experiments are for determining the sort of sub-grid-scale motions that exist in the average HF radar velocity fields that are provided. This sub-grid-scale energy must be considered in trajectory model development.
See this experiment's:
Overview maps
Box is deployment area, plus symbols are oil platforms, and lines of bathymetry are the same depths as those designated on the colorbar to the right.