The response over a submarine canyon to a several day upwelling event can be separated into three phases: an initial transient response; a later, much longer, “steady” advection-driven response; and a final relaxation phase. For the advection-driven phase over realistically steep, deep, and narrow canyons with near-uniform flow and stratification at rim depth, we have derived scale estimates for four key quantities. Observations from 5 real-world canyon studies and 3 laboratory studies are used to validate the scaling and estimate the scalar constant for each scale. Based on 4 geometric parameters of the canyon, the background stratification, the Coriolis parameter, and the incoming current, we can estimate (1) the depth of upwelling in the...
Circulation near a submarine canyon is analyzed with a numerical model. Previous theoretical work in...
It has been considered that intensified upwelling/downwelling in a submarine canyon indenting contin...
Submarine canyons which indent the continental shelf are frequently regions of steep (up to 45°), th...
Submarine canyons, topographic features incising the continental slope, vary in both shape and size....
Submarine canyons are known regions of enhanced upwelling. Previous studies have looked into the dyn...
The response of a coastal ocean numerical model, typical of eastern boundaries, is investigated unde...
Mackenzie Canyon, in the southeastern Beaufort Sea, is a site for strong upwelling compared to the a...
This paper explores the dynamical origin and physical characteristics of flow disturbances induced b...
A parameterization for the on-shelf mass flux induced by upwelling through a shelf break submarine c...
[1] A parameterization for the on-shelf mass flux induced by upwelling through a shelf break submari...
Analytical and numerical models of circulation over submarine canyons are presented where parameters...
Circulation over coastal submarine canyons driven by constant upwelling or downwelling wind stress i...
Submarine canyons are common bathymetric features that cut into the continental shelf from the cont...
Long canyons are topographic features that are responsible for increased upwelling along coastal ma...
Flow dynamics around a downwelling submarine canyon were analyzed with the Massachusetts Institute o...
Circulation near a submarine canyon is analyzed with a numerical model. Previous theoretical work in...
It has been considered that intensified upwelling/downwelling in a submarine canyon indenting contin...
Submarine canyons which indent the continental shelf are frequently regions of steep (up to 45°), th...
Submarine canyons, topographic features incising the continental slope, vary in both shape and size....
Submarine canyons are known regions of enhanced upwelling. Previous studies have looked into the dyn...
The response of a coastal ocean numerical model, typical of eastern boundaries, is investigated unde...
Mackenzie Canyon, in the southeastern Beaufort Sea, is a site for strong upwelling compared to the a...
This paper explores the dynamical origin and physical characteristics of flow disturbances induced b...
A parameterization for the on-shelf mass flux induced by upwelling through a shelf break submarine c...
[1] A parameterization for the on-shelf mass flux induced by upwelling through a shelf break submari...
Analytical and numerical models of circulation over submarine canyons are presented where parameters...
Circulation over coastal submarine canyons driven by constant upwelling or downwelling wind stress i...
Submarine canyons are common bathymetric features that cut into the continental shelf from the cont...
Long canyons are topographic features that are responsible for increased upwelling along coastal ma...
Flow dynamics around a downwelling submarine canyon were analyzed with the Massachusetts Institute o...
Circulation near a submarine canyon is analyzed with a numerical model. Previous theoretical work in...
It has been considered that intensified upwelling/downwelling in a submarine canyon indenting contin...
Submarine canyons which indent the continental shelf are frequently regions of steep (up to 45°), th...