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Russ E. Davis

Bio: Russ E. Davis is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ocean current & Ocean gyre. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 129 publications receiving 14075 citations. Previous affiliations of Russ E. Davis include University of California, Los Angeles & Stanford University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a technique for the objective analysis of oceanic data has been developed and used on simulated data, which is based on a standard statistical result, the Gauss-Markov Theorem, which gives an expression for the least square error linear estimate of some physical variable given measurements at a limited number of data points, the statistics of the field being estimated in the form of space-time spectra, and the measurement errors.

1,039 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
05 Mar 2007
TL;DR: This paper addresses the design of mobile sensor networks for optimal data collection by using a performance metric, used to derive optimal paths for the network of mobile sensors, to define the optimal data set.
Abstract: This paper addresses the design of mobile sensor networks for optimal data collection. The development is strongly motivated by the application to adaptive ocean sampling for an autonomous ocean observing and prediction system. A performance metric, used to derive optimal paths for the network of mobile sensors, defines the optimal data set as one which minimizes error in a model estimate of the sampled field. Feedback control laws are presented that stably coordinate sensors on structured tracks that have been optimized over a minimal set of parameters. Optimal, closed-loop solutions are computed in a number of low-dimensional cases to illustrate the methodology. Robustness of the performance to the influence of a steady flow field on relatively slow-moving mobile sensors is also explored

920 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the variability of sea level pressure (SLP) and sea surface temperature (SST) in the mid-latitude North Pacific Ocean and found that SLP variability is concentrated in a few large scale modes but has a nearly white frequency spectrum.
Abstract: Nonseasonal variability of sea level pressure (SLP) and sea surface temperature (SST) in the mid-latitude North Pacific Ocean is examined. The objective is examination of the basic scales of the variability and determination of possible causal connections which might allow prediction of short-term climatic (time scales between a month and a year) variability. Using empirical orthogonal function descriptions of the spatial structure, it is found that SLP variability is concentrated in a few large-scale modes but has a nearly white frequency spectrum. SST variability is spatially complex (being spread over many spatial modes, some of which have small-scale changes) but is dominated by low-frequency changes. The use of linear statistical estimators to examine predictability is discussed and the importance of limiting the number of candidate data used in a correlation starch is underscored. Using linear statistical predictors, it is found that (A) SST anomalies can be predicted from SST observations ...

907 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a small (50-kg, 2-m long) underwater vehicle with operating speeds of 20-30 cm/s and ranges up to 6000 km has been developed and field tested.
Abstract: A small (50-kg, 2-m long) underwater vehicle with operating speeds of 20-30 cm/s and ranges up to 6000 km has been developed and field tested. The vehicle is essentially an autonomous profiling float that uses a buoyancy engine to cycle vertically and wings to glide horizontally while moving up and down. Operational control and data relay is provided by GPS navigation and two-way communication through ORBCOMM low-Earth-orbit satellites. Missions are envisioned with profile measurements repeated at a station or spaced along a transect. The initial instrument complement of temperature, conductivity, and pressure sensors was used to observe internal waves and tides in the Monterey underwater canyon.

720 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Underwater gliders are autonomous vehicles that profile vertically by buoyancy control and move horizontally on wings as mentioned in this paper, and are among the best approaches to achieving subsurface spatial resolution necessary for ocean research.
Abstract: Underwater gliders are autonomous vehicles that profile vertically by buoyancy control and move horizontally on wings. Gliders are reviewed, from their conception by Stommel as an extension of autonomous profiling floats, through their development in 3 models, and including their first deployments singly and in numbers. This paper discusses the basics of glider function as implemented by University of Washington, Seaglider, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and Webb Research in Slocum. Preliminary results are presented from a recent demonstration project that used a network of gliders off Monterey. A wide range of sensors has already been deployed on gliders, with many under development, and a wider range of future possibilities. Glider networks appear to be among the best approaches to achieving subsurface spatial resolution necessary for ocean research.

652 citations


Cited by
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[...]

08 Dec 2001-BMJ
TL;DR: There is, I think, something ethereal about i —the square root of minus one, which seems an odd beast at that time—an intruder hovering on the edge of reality.
Abstract: There is, I think, something ethereal about i —the square root of minus one. I remember first hearing about it at school. It seemed an odd beast at that time—an intruder hovering on the edge of reality. Usually familiarity dulls this sense of the bizarre, but in the case of i it was the reverse: over the years the sense of its surreal nature intensified. It seemed that it was impossible to write mathematics that described the real world in …

33,785 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new parameterization of oceanic boundary layer mixing is developed to accommodate some of this physics, including a scheme for determining the boundary layer depth h, where the turbulent contribution to the vertical shear of a bulk Richardson number is parameterized.
Abstract: If model parameterizations of unresolved physics, such as the variety of upper ocean mixing processes, are to hold over the large range of time and space scales of importance to climate, they must be strongly physically based. Observations, theories, and models of oceanic vertical mixing are surveyed. Two distinct regimes are identified: ocean mixing in the boundary layer near the surface under a variety of surface forcing conditions (stabilizing, destabilizing, and wind driven), and mixing in the ocean interior due to internal waves, shear instability, and double diffusion (arising from the different molecular diffusion rates of heat and salt). Mixing schemes commonly applied to the upper ocean are shown not to contain some potentially important boundary layer physics. Therefore a new parameterization of oceanic boundary layer mixing is developed to accommodate some of this physics. It includes a scheme for determining the boundary layer depth h, where the turbulent contribution to the vertical shear of a bulk Richardson number is parameterized. Expressions for diffusivity and nonlocal transport throughout the boundary layer are given. The diffusivity is formulated to agree with similarity theory of turbulence in the surface layer and is subject to the conditions that both it and its vertical gradient match the interior values at h. This nonlocal “K profile parameterization” (KPP) is then verified and compared to alternatives, including its atmospheric counterparts. Its most important feature is shown to be the capability of the boundary layer to penetrate well into a stable thermocline in both convective and wind-driven situations. The diffusivities of the aforementioned three interior mixing processes are modeled as constants, functions of a gradient Richardson number (a measure of the relative importance of stratification to destabilizing shear), and functions of the double-diffusion density ratio, Rρ. Oceanic simulations of convective penetration, wind deepening, and diurnal cycling are used to determine appropriate values for various model parameters as weak functions of vertical resolution. Annual cycle simulations at ocean weather station Papa for 1961 and 1969–1974 are used to test the complete suite of parameterizations. Model and observed temperatures at all depths are shown to agree very well into September, after which systematic advective cooling in the ocean produces expected differences. It is argued that this cooling and a steady salt advection into the model are needed to balance the net annual surface heating and freshwater input. With these advections, good multiyear simulations of temperature and salinity can be achieved. These results and KPP simulations of the diurnal cycle at the Long-Term Upper Ocean Study (LOTUS) site are compared with the results of other models. It is demonstrated that the KPP model exchanges properties between the mixed layer and thermocline in a manner consistent with observations, and at least as well or better than alternatives.

3,756 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, several fundamental key aspects of underwater acoustic communications are investigated and a cross-layer approach to the integration of all communication functionalities is suggested.
Abstract: Underwater sensor nodes will find applications in oceanographic data collection, pollution monitoring, offshore exploration, disaster prevention, assisted navigation and tactical surveillance applications. Moreover, unmanned or autonomous underwater vehicles (UUVs, AUVs), equipped with sensors, will enable the exploration of natural undersea resources and gathering of scientific data in collaborative monitoring missions. Underwater acoustic networking is the enabling technology for these applications. Underwater networks consist of a variable number of sensors and vehicles that are deployed to perform collaborative monitoring tasks over a given area. In this paper, several fundamental key aspects of underwater acoustic communications are investigated. Different architectures for two-dimensional and three-dimensional underwater sensor networks are discussed, and the characteristics of the underwater channel are detailed. The main challenges for the development of efficient networking solutions posed by the underwater environment are detailed and a cross-layer approach to the integration of all communication functionalities is suggested. Furthermore, open research issues are discussed and possible solution approaches are outlined. � 2005 Published by Elsevier B.V.

2,864 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used sea ice motion retrievals from Sentinel-1 imagery to report on the recent behavior of these ice arches and the associated ice fluxes, and they showed that the duration of arch formation has decreased over the past 20 years, while the ice area and volume fluxes along Nares Strait have both increased.
Abstract: The ice arches that usually develop at the northern and southern ends of Nares Strait play an important role in modulating the export of Arctic Ocean multi-year sea ice. The Arctic Ocean is evolving towards an ice pack that is younger, thinner, and more mobile and the fate of its multi-year ice is becoming of increasing interest. Here, we use sea ice motion retrievals from Sentinel-1 imagery to report on the recent behavior of these ice arches and the associated ice fluxes. We show that the duration of arch formation has decreased over the past 20 years, while the ice area and volume fluxes along Nares Strait have both increased. These results suggest that a transition is underway towards a state where the formation of these arches will become atypical with a concomitant increase in the export of multi-year ice accelerating the transition towards a younger and thinner Arctic ice pack.

2,774 citations