Logo des Repositoriums
Zur Startseite
  • English
  • Deutsch
Anmelden
  1. Startseite
  2. SuUB
  3. Dissertationen
  4. Untersuchungen zum Einfluss des Ozeans auf die Rotation der Erde: Assimilation beobachteter Erdrotationsparameter mit einem globalen Ozeanmodell
 
Zitierlink URN
https://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-diss000116051

Untersuchungen zum Einfluss des Ozeans auf die Rotation der Erde: Assimilation beobachteter Erdrotationsparameter mit einem globalen Ozeanmodell

Veröffentlichungsdatum
2009-09-21
Autoren
Saynisch, Jan  
Betreuer
Olber, Dirk  
Gutachter
Thomas, Maik  
Zusammenfassung
Changes in the oceanic current system and in the oceanic mass distribution alter the state of the Earth's free rotation which is characterised by length of day and polar motion. The study of this connection was the challenge and the subject of this thesis. To this end, the oceanic state was estimated by assimilating Earth rotation observations with a global ocean model. The considered time span was 1993 to 2002. Although assimilation is a well established tool in climate science the assimilation of Earth rotation observations with a global ocean model is done for the first time. Before the assimilation, the observations had to be projected onto the angular momentum of the ocean. Non-oceanic contributions were removed. The result of the assimilation procedure is a time varying ocean modelstate, i.e. a trajectory, that reproduces the Earth rotationobservations. This trajectory was studied to understand the generation of Earth rotation deviations by the oceans. The governing physical mechanisms could be identified: First, changes in length of day are attributed to changes in total ocean mass. These changes are determined by the surface freshwater flux from the atmosphere to the ocean. Changes in the ocean current system have a minor contributionto length of day changes. Second, the excitation of polar motion is connected to the inhomogeneous distribution of ocean mass. These inhomogeneities are a consequence of the wind and buoyancy-driven currents. The results of this non-uniform mass distributions are currents too, i.e. geostrophic currents. This way the oceanic excitation of polar motion splits up into contributions from currentsand mass distribution. Both contributions entail each other and are highly correlated.
Schlagwörter
Earth rotation

; 

data assimilation

; 

ocean circulation

; 

tensor of inertia

; 

polar motion

; 

length of day change

; 

excitation function

; 

angular momentum
Institution
Universität Bremen  
Fachbereich
Fachbereich 01: Physik/Elektrotechnik (FB 01)  
Dokumenttyp
Dissertation
Zweitveröffentlichung
Nein
Sprache
Deutsch
Dateien
Lade...
Vorschaubild
Name

00011605.pdf

Size

13.74 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum

(MD5):4bf0cb9f06fcb846d3bd8cdeee08100a

Built with DSpace-CRIS software - Extension maintained and optimized by 4Science

  • Datenschutzbestimmungen
  • Endnutzervereinbarung
  • Feedback schicken