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Measurements of the oceanic thermal skin effect
Authors:Peter J Minnett  Murray Smith
Institution:a Meteorology & Physical Oceanography, Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, Miami, FL 33149, USA
b National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, P.O. Box 14-901, Kilbirnie, Wellington, New Zealand
c School of Physics and Environmental Change Institute, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland
Abstract:Spectroradiometric measurements of the ocean skin temperature and thermometric measurements of the bulk temperature at a depth of about 5 cm taken from the R/V Tangaroa during SAGE (SOLAS/SAGE: surface-ocean lower-atmosphere studies air-sea gas exchange experiment) off New Zealand are analyzed to reveal the wind speed dependence of the temperature difference across the thermal skin layer (??T). The wind speeds used here are corrected for flow distortion by the ship. Unlike most previously published measurements of ??T, these data include those taken during the day, prior analyses being usually restricted to night-time measurements to avoid contamination of the data by diurnal heating. The results show the same dependence of ??T on wind speed at night-time measurements, with an asymptotic behavior at a value of −0.13 K at high winds. These data show larger ??T at low wind speeds than previous studies, and there is an indication that this may reveal a dependence on sea surface temperature.
Keywords:Skin SST  Daytime skin effect  Marine winds  Flow distortion correction  SAGE
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