Title :
Results from the first deployment of the BASS Rake field prototype
Author :
Morrison, Archie T., III
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Appl. Ocean Phys. & Eng., Woods Hole Oceanogr. Instn., MA, USA
Abstract :
The BASS Rake is an acoustic travel time current meter designed to make spatially and temporally dense velocity profile measurements in the continental shelf wave bottom boundary layer. The thinness of the layer is responsible for high levels of bottom shear stress which are important contributors to the sediment entrainment process and which enhance turbulent dissipation of flow energy. The BASS Rake is a modification of BASS, the Benthic Acoustic Stress Sensor, using a new geometry to image flow in the WBBL. A laboratory prototype has previously demonstrated the features and near bed capabilities of the new design. The field prototype described was constructed with standard BASS components to evaluate the measurement technique and the performance of the support frame in the near shore zone. The field prototype measures the horizontal velocity vector at ten heights from the bottom up to 30 cm above the bottom. The results of tow tank calibration and cosine response measurements are presented. After calibration the field prototype was deployed in 3 m of water immediately outside the surf zone of a local beach. Profiles were recorded continuously at 1 Hz for approximately 3.5 weeks in December of 1996. This period includes both calm and storm conditions. Selected data from this deployment are presented
Keywords :
flowmeters; oceanographic equipment; underwater sound; BASS Rake; Benthic Acoustic Stress Sensor; acoustic travel time current meter; continental shelf wave bottom boundary layer; current; dynamics; horizontal velocity vector; measurement technique; ocean; prototype; velocity profile; Acoustic measurements; Acoustic waves; Calibration; Current measurement; Image sensors; Prototypes; Sediments; Stress; Time measurement; Velocity measurement;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS '97. MTS/IEEE Conference Proceedings
Conference_Location :
Halifax, NS
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4108-2
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.1997.634418