625-331 Atmosphere-Ocean Interaction | |
|---|---|
Credit Points | 25 |
Coordinator | Prof I H Simmonds |
Prerequisites | Earth sciences 625-227, 625-228; mathematics 620-141, 620-142, 620-143 or equivalent. At least one of mathematics 620-231 and 620-232 is recommended. |
Semester | 1 (view timetable) |
Contact | 36 lectures (three per week) and 60 hours of practical work (five hours per week) |
Subject Description | Topics include circulation of the atmosphere and ocean and how they interact to influence weather and climate; El Niño-Southern Oscillation events, atmospheric and oceanic processes in the Antarctic region; the general circulation, Sverdrup transport, wind-driven ocean circulation; atmospheric and oceanic wave processes and instabilities, generation of eddies and 'weather'; turbulent structure of the ocean and atmosphere, the surface and boundary layers, Ekman flows; and air-sea interaction, exchanges of heat, moisture and momentum at the interface. On completion of this subject, students should have an appreciation of atmospheric and oceanic motion and interactions on a range of time and spatial scales and their importance for climate. |
Assessment | Weekly written reports of practical work of up to 500 words each during semester (35%); written assignments totalling up to 3000 words due during semester (10%); a 3-hour written examination in the examination period (55%). |
Status: Official 2007 Last Modified: Tuesday October 31 22:21 SGML to HTML Conversion: Information Division - CWIS (SDI) Authorised by: Academic Registrar Enquiries: http://unimelb.custhelp.com/