Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Jim V. Mansbridge"'
Autor:
Russell A. S. Fiedler, Richard J. Matear, Matthew A. Chamberlain, Andreas Schiller, Jim V. Mansbridge
Publikováno v:
Ocean Modelling. 69:108-122
Results from an eddy-admitting and a non-eddy admitting ocean circulation model with parameterizations for barotropic tide-induced bottom friction mixing are compared to two observation data sets. The use of tide-induced vertical viscosity and diffus
Autor:
Andreas Schiller, David Griffin, Peter R. Oke, Russell Fiedler, Jeff R. Dunn, Jim V. Mansbridge, Pavel Sakov, Madeleine Cahill, Ken Ridgway
Publikováno v:
Ocean Modelling. 67:52-70
The generation and evolution of eddies in the ocean are largely due to instabilities that are unpredictable, even on short time-scales. As a result, eddy-resolving ocean reanalyses typically use data assimilation to regularly adjust the model state.
Autor:
David Griffin, Matthew A. Chamberlain, Peter R. Oke, Andrew Lenton, Russell Fiedler, Andreas Schiller, Jim V. Mansbridge, Richard J. Matear, Ken Ridgway, Madeleine Cahill
Publikováno v:
Geoscientific Model Development, Vol 6, Iss 3, Pp 591-615 (2013)
Analysis of the variability of the last 18 yr (1993–2012) of a 32 yr run of a new near-global, eddy-resolving ocean general circulation model coupled with biogeochemistry is presented. Comparisons between modelled and observed mean sea level (MSL),
Autor:
Jim V. Mansbridge, Russell Fiedler, Peter R. Oke, Mikhail Entel, Gary B. Brassington, Andreas Schiller, David Griffin
Publikováno v:
Progress in Oceanography. 76:334-365
The first global ocean reanalysis with focus on the Asian–Australian region was performed for the period October 1992 to June 2006. The 14-year experiment assimilated available observations of altimetric sea-level anomaly, satellite SST and quality
Publikováno v:
Journal of Shellfish Research. 25:179-185
Silver-lip pearl oyster (Pinctada maxima) spat surveyed in the Eighty Mile Beach section of the North West Shelf have been used in conjunction with outputs from a particle dispersion model to identify likely spawning grounds. The dispersion model con
The potentially fatal Irukandji syndrome is relatively common in tropical waters throughout the world. It is caused by the sting of the Irukandji jellyfish, a family of box jellyfish that are almost impossible to detect in the water owing to their sm
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::0da00ced9814f4ebf67d120243d9704a
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4032527/
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4032527/