add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
 

ESTUARINE INFLUENCE ON TIDALLY DRIVEN CIRCULATION IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT
Access this item.
TitleESTUARINE INFLUENCE ON TIDALLY DRIVEN CIRCULATION IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT
AuthorBacopoulos, Peter
KeywordsModeling and simulation
tides
circulation
South Atlantic Bight
estuaries
salt marshes
AbstractA high-resolution, finite element-based, shallow water equation model is developed to simulate the tides in the South Atlantic Bight. The model is constructed to include all of the estuarine features along the southeastern United States seaboard: coastal inlets, rivers and tidal creeks, sounds and lagoons, intertidal zones including salt marshes and mangrove swamps, and the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway. The estuaries are represented in the finite element mesh using triangular elements with side lengths on the order of tens of meters. Also incorporated into the model is a spatially distributed bottom friction parameterization, based on the various landcover and benthic characteristics in the domain. The motivation to use this comprehensive representation of the system was inspired by a desire to capably account for the full estuarine tidal physics. In this approach, no calibration is performed and the model is used as a tool to assess the physical processes it describes. Upon its development, the model is first validated by accurately simulating tidal hydrodynamics in the South Atlantic Bight including the described estuaries. Variants of the model are then constructed by selectively removing estuarine features from the domain. All model representations are subsequently applied in nearly identical simulations: the only differing factor between the simulations being the inland extent of the estuaries described. The solutions are compared with respect to including versus excluding the estuarine features of the domain. Where water surface elevations are shown to be unaffected by the estuarine features of the South Atlantic Bight, tidal velocities exhibit far more sensitivity. This effect is pronounced locally, with regional effects extending offshore. Further analysis is performed on cross-sectional flows recomposed locally and on tidal energetics diagnosed throughout the domain. It is discovered that the high frictional environment of the vast estuarine surface area plays a role in local and regional tidal circulation in the South Atlantic Bight.
AdviserHagen, Scott
PublisherUniversity of Central Florida
DegreePh.D.
Degree DisciplineDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Degree GrantorEngineering and Computer Science
Degree ProgramCivil Engineering PhD
Graduation Date2009-01-01
TypeDoctoral dissertation
Access LevelPublic - Allow Worldwide Access
Release Date2010-02-05
RepositoryUniversity Archives
Repository CollectionElectronic Theses and Dissertations
IdentifierCFE0002891
Access Linkhttp://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/CFE0002891

add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
powered by CONTENTdm ® | contact us  ^ to top ^