Three Scripps students took advantage of UC Ship Funds to join a January expedition to the Indian Ocean.
A Learning Experience
UC Ship Funds opens the door to students, scientists aboard R/V Revelle
A winter cruise meant to offer students opportunities to gain at-sea
expedition experience satisfied a science goal as well this winter.
An expedition to the Indian Ocean made the first detailed measurements of a
key oceanographic phenomenon, an outcome that might not have been possible
without an innovative University of California funding program to support
ship-based research.
The UC Ship Funds program, which emphasizes student teaching aboard research
expeditions, along with the National Science Foundation, supported studies
on Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego's research vessel
Roger Revelle.
Scripps physical oceanographers Jennifer MacKinnon, Robert Pinkel and Shaun
Johnston led a search for giant undersea waves. Like surface waves people
see on the beach, so-called internal ocean waves also crest and break under
the sea surface. Some can reach the size of 10-story buildings.
During the cruise, the researchers focused on an area of the Indian Ocean
known as the Southwest Indian Ridge, one of the areas on the planet where
tectonic plates are spreading apart. In addition to addressing a dearth of
data about internal waves in this region, the researchers surmised that the
Southwest Indian Ridge's jagged topography might result in an array of
interesting internal wave phenomena.
They were correct. With instruments that measured water velocity, the
researchers believe they captured the first close look at internal waves
and internal mixing inside a 6-kilometer (3.7-mile) deep area called the
Atlantis II Fracture Zone. Their data include information on how cooler,
bottom waters intricately mix with warmer waters as they flow between the
Southern and Indian Oceans.
"Higher up in the water column, we observed a series of internal tidal
beams crisscrossing the water column, bouncing between ridge tops and the
surface," said MacKinnon.
With the newly obtained data, Pinkel and graduate students Oliver Sun and
San Nguyen will be studying the pathways of wave energy emitted from the
tidal beams. Sun and Nguyen were among four students who were able to take
part in the cruise thanks to UC Ship Funds.
Results from the cruise, which concluded Jan. 30, will help scientists
understand how currents flow around the planet and especially through the
under-sampled Indian Ocean region. The data may also help scientists better
understand the earth's climate system by adding details to computer models
of how heat and dissolved greenhouse gases are mixed into the deep ocean.
"What we've learned from this cruise and others before it is that ocean
mixing is enormously different from place to place and time to time," said
MacKinnon. "The more places we look, the more we see different sorts of
things causing mixing and the more inhomogeneous it all seems."
For Bruce Appelgate, associate director for Ship Operations and Marine
Technical Support, the cruise was the latest example of how funding sources
such as UC Ship Funds can deliver unique opportunities for research and
teaching. Since 1995 UC Ship Funds have supported an average of 57 days at
sea per year on cruises ranging from single-day trips off San Diego to
21-day expeditions from foreign ports.
"Oceanographic research vessels are enormously expensive to operate, and the
competition among researchers for external funding is fierce. Scripps has
historically recognized the importance of enabling our researchers' and
students' access to the sea," said Appelgate. "Our UC Ship Funds allow us
to continue this tradition by supporting teaching and research at sea
aboard Scripps vessels."
Mario C. Aguilera
May 2008
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