Title of article :
Estimating effective longitudinal dispersion in the Chesapeake Bay
Author/Authors :
Jay A. Austin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
An analysis of Environmental Protection Agency’s Chesapeake Bay Program hydrographic dataset shows that the bay responds
coherently to variability in freshwater flux. Mean salinity and salinity stratification both respond to variability in freshwater flux on
time scales of roughly 90 days. Stratification is also influenced by local wind forcing but on much shorter (4e5 day) time scales. The
volume of available data allows the effective longitudinal dispersion coefficient to be estimated as a function of either time or space.
Values for this dispersion coefficient vary between 200 and 1000 m2 s 1, with mean values around 650 m2 s 1. The spatially
dependent structure has a maximum roughly 75 km from the head of the estuary, and decreases gradually towards the mouth. The
temporally varying effective dispersion varies spatially as the inverse of the estuarine cross-section, and temporally as the cube root
of the freshwater flux, and is at least qualitatively consistent with models of estuarine circulation and results of previous field studies.
Estimates of the numerical values of the dispersion are useful for better understanding distributions of other tracers within the bay,
as well as providing another metric against which numerical models should be measured
Keywords :
salinity , Chesapeake Bay , Estuary , dispersion , mixing , stratification
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science