Tuesday, February 4, 2020

What is a Rossby wave?


Rossby waves naturally occur in rotating fluids.
Within the Earth's ocean and atmosphere, these planetary waves play a significant role in shaping weather.
This animation from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center shows both long and short atmospheric waves as indicated by the jet stream.
The colors represent the speed of the wind ranging from slowest (light blue colors) to fastest (dark red).

From NOAA

Oceanic and atmospheric Rossby waves — also known as planetary waves — naturally occur largely due to the Earth's rotation.
These waves affect the planet's weather and climate.

Oceanic Rossby Waves

Waves in the ocean come in many different shapes and sizes.
Slow-moving oceanic Rossby waves are are fundamentally different from ocean surface waves.
Unlike waves that break along the shore, Rossby waves are huge, undulating movements of the ocean that stretch horizontally across the planet for hundreds of kilometers in a westward direction.
They are so large and massive that they can change Earth's climate conditions.
Along with rising sea levels, King Tides, and the effects of El Niño, oceanic Rossby waves contribute to high tides and coastal flooding in some regions of the world.

Rossby wave movement is complex.
The horizontal wave speed of a Rossby (the amount of time it takes the wave to travel across an ocean basin) is dependent upon the latitude of the wave. In the Pacific, for instance, waves at lower latitudes (closer to the equator) may take months to a year to cross the ocean.
Waves that form farther away from the equator (at mid-latitudes) of the Pacific may take closer to 10 to 20 years to make the journey.
The vertical motion of Rossby waves is small along the ocean's surface and large along the deeper thermocline — the transition area between the ocean's warm upper layer and colder depths.
This variation in vertical motion of the water's surface can be quite dramatic: the typical vertical movement of the water's surface is generally four inches or less, while the vertical movement of the thermocline for the same wave is approximately 1,000 times greater.
In other words, for a four inch or less surface displacement along the ocean surface, there may be more than 300 feet of corresponding vertical movement in the thermocline far below the surface!
Due to the small vertical movement along the ocean surface, oceanic Rossby waves are undetectable by the human eye.
Scientists typically rely on satellite radar altimetry to detect the massive waves.

Atmospheric Rossby Waves

According to the National Weather Service, atmospheric Rossby waves form primarily as a result of the Earth's geography. Rossby waves help transfer heat from the tropics toward the poles and cold air toward the tropics in an attempt to return atmosphere to balance.
They also help locate the jet stream and mark out the track of surface low pressure systems.
The slow motion of these waves often results in fairly long, persistent weather patterns.

 Links :

Monday, February 3, 2020

British Isles & misc. (UKHO) layer update in the GeoGarage platform

see GeoGarage news 

 Satellite imagery used to keep nautical charts up to date
courtesy of : UKHO

Scientists create cyborg jellyfish with swimming superpowers

This artist illustration shows what the robotic-hybrid jellyfish look like.
Rebecca Konte/Caltech

From CNET by Amanda Kooser

They're like regular jellyfish, but faster and more awesome.

Darth Vader and RoboCop now have some cyborg company in the form of superpowered jellyfish. Researchers at the California Institute of Technology have developed a swim controller that turns regular jellyfish into speed demons.

The device enhances a jellyfish's natural pulsing motion that it uses to move around in the water.
"The new prosthetic uses electrical impulses to regulate -- and speed up -- that pulsing, similar to the way a cardiac pacemaker regulates heart rate," Caltech said in a release on Wednesday.

Researchers fitted some moon jellyfish with a prosthetic “swim controller”
Credit: Nicole Xu and John Dabiri Caltech

The electronic swim controller made the modified jellyfish swim nearly three times faster than their normal speed
Credit: Nicole Xu and John Dabiri Caltech 

The microelectronic prosthetic propels the cyborg jellyfish to swim almost three times faster while using just twice the metabolic energy of their unmodified peers.
The prosthetics can be removed without harming the jellyfish.

The research team published its findings in the journal Science Advances on Wednesday.

The scientists aren't making superpowered jellies just for fun.
The cyborg invertebrates could potentially carry sensors into the ocean to gather data from otherwise hard-to-reach locations.

Engineers at Caltech and Stanford University have developed a tiny prosthetic that enables jellyfish to swim faster and more efficiently than they normally do, without stressing the animals.
The researchers behind the project envision a future in which jellyfish equipped with sensors could be directed to explore and record information about the ocean.

The Navy funded a jellyfish-inspired robot project in 2012, but the biohybrid approach has some advantages.
The cyborgs don't have the power limitations of full-on robots and don't need to be tethered to an external power source.

"If we can find a way to direct these jellyfish and also equip them with sensors to track things like ocean temperature, salinity, oxygen levels, and so on, we could create a truly global ocean network where each of the jellyfish robots costs a few dollars to instrument and feeds themselves energy from prey already in the ocean," said Caltech engineer and research lead John Dabiri.

It sounds like sci-fi, but an army of cyborg jellies may play a role in the future of ocean exploration and monitoring.

Links :

Sunday, February 2, 2020

Nomad Africa

A visual experiment featuring surfer Alex Smith and the wild, eccentric landscapes of Africa.

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Bjorn Dunkerbeck - The Movie - Trailer

This is the movie trailer for the upcoming film about Bjorn Dunkerbeck and his windsurfing life. 
This part is about the Lüderitz Speed Challenge in Namibia.

Get some insights from the Lüderitz Speed Challenge when things start to fly.