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Extended Abstract

At frequencies below 1 kHz sound absorption coefficients in the ocean are a function of pH, and at higher frequencies are dependent upon MgSO. The pH dependent terms are attributable to relaxation of B(OH) and MgCO species, and the ensemble effect has been approximated ( Mellen et al. [1987]) as:

where is the absorption coefficient (dB/km) and

where S is the salinity, is the amplitude of each component and depends on pH, f is the frequency and is the relaxation frequency. Overall accuracy of 15% in requires that pH be known to 0.05 pH units.

The presently used oceanic pH field for sound absorption models is derived from a combination of GEOSECS data and Soviet data from the Gorshkov atlas ( Gorshkov [1978]) for the North Atlantic where GEOSECS data are absent. We compare the North Atlantic fields with the well constrained TTO North Atlantic CO data set and find large differences. We further show that sufficiently strong correlations exist between CO system variables and other more commonly available hydrographic properties that improved renditions of the pH field in other regions of the ocean are possible once equivalent local correlations are established, thus leading to greatly improved estimates of the sound absorption field.

Accurate measurement of the oceanic CO system on a global scale has long been a goal of ocean chemists and has a confusing history. Complexities in representing the pH scale, uncertainties in thermodynamic constants, and the need for an adequate chemical model of sea water have all contributed to the problem. The first large scale data set was that obtained during the GEOSECS program (1972--1978); the details of the CO system measurements made then are to be found in Bradshaw et al. [1981], and the data are recorded in the GEOSECS atlases.

Early work on the North Atlantic segments of GEOSECS did not produce a useful CO data set due to problems with sensor readiness, and thus a large data gap existed. This deficiency was remedied in the Transient Tracers in the Ocean (TTO) North Atlantic cruise of 1981 where, following the work of Bradshaw et al. [1981] a large and well documented data set was obtained. The uses for oceanic CO data are many, and among them is the estimation of the oceanic sound absorption coefficient (dB/km) at low frequencies. This problem is the focus of this paper.

The history of elucidating the oceanic chemical properties responsible for sound absorption is a fascinating one. An excellent account is to be found in the Naval Underwater Systems Center (NUSC) report by Mellen et al. [1987]. Early work by Leonard et al. [1949] established that MgSO was responsible for the absorption anomaly, relative to fresh waters, at frequencies in the 10 --- 100 kHz range. Eigen and Tamm [1962] formally established the two-step equilibrium and relaxation process involved.

Schulkin and Marsh [1962] provided the first practical formula for sound absorption in sea water, and Thorp [1965] was able to show that an absorption anomaly, one order of magnitude greater than that predicted by the Schulkin and Marsh formula, existed for frequencies about 3 kHz. The pH dependence of this low frequency anomaly was subsequently confirmed by resonator experiments, and thus predictions of the low frequency sound absorption in sea water depend upon a knowledge of the pH field.

Mellen et al. [1987] have combined the chemical terms responsible for acoustic losses into a global absorption formula model of the form:

 

where

 

and

in which S is the salinity, is the amplitude of each component, K is a pH dependent parameter (), is the relaxation frequency (kHz) of the corresponding term, f is the frequency for which the sound absorption coefficient is being evaluated, T is temperature (C), d is depth (km), and consequently and are pH dependent terms of the form:

 

is a constant. They note that pH is clearly the major limiting factor in the accuracy of the absorption formula, and that errors of 15% in require that pH be known to 0.05 pH units. Although Qiu [1991] has shown that this model may need to include the effects of pressure on B(OH), revision of the acoustic absorption model is beyond the scope of this paper.

We recognize that many other terms contribute to acoustic losses in the ocean. Guoliang and Worcester [1989] recently investigated the obverse of this problem by examining the possibility of determining pH from the acoustic signals. They found that surface scattering introduced considerable complexity and concluded that differential acoustic transmissions at 550 100 Hz over a 750 km path would require about 60 independent samples in order to estimate mean pH in the Atlantic acoustic path to a precision of 0.05 pH units.

The problem then is not easy. However, if reliable estimates of the oceanic pH field on a common, and well defined, scale are achievable, then a consistent oceanic matrix for interpreting long range acoustic losses can be provided. In this paper we examine this problem.

Our research was stimulated by the observation that, in order to provide full North Atlantic coverage, Mellen et al. [1987] were forced to resort to combining GEOSECS data and Soviet data from the Gorshkov atlas [1978]. We are aware of the difficulties here and undertook to examine the reliability of this approach through comparison of the Gorshkov data with the more recently available TTO data set. In addition, we were compelled to ask to what extent the pH field is predictable from regressions with hydrographic chemistry master variables that have been more widely measured in the global ocean.

After a long history of difficulties in both developing a sound absorption model and measuring CO system variables in sea water, the results presented here for the North Atlantic ocean suggest that the oceanic pH field can now be defined on a dense geographic grid within the a precision of 0.05 pH unit, as required for determining the sound absorption coefficient to within 15%. The extension of this result from the North Atlantic ocean to other regions is currently under investigation. The results of the present and planned measurements of the carbonate system in the world ocean within the international programs such as JGOFS and WOCE are enlarging the present CO database and will further allow us to refine and extend the validity of these concepts.

In summary we have evaluated the usefulness of prediction of the ocean pH field from other hydrographic chemical variables. We have further reviewed the various pH scales currently in use by geochemists. We show that the purely non-CO system variables of the TTO North Atlantic data set gives an estimate of the pH field that is superior to the direct estimate provided by the Gorshkov atlas. We suggest our estimates of K be adopted for the North Atlantic. We extend our work by presenting multiple linear regression formulae representing C and A as linear combinations of more commonly measured hydrographic and nutrient variables in the North Atlantic. Finally, we are ascertaining similar relationships in other ocean basins.

 
Table:  Stepwise Multiple Linear Regression Parameters and Statistics for A

 
Table:  Stepwise Multiple Linear Regression Parameters and Statistics for C



next up previous
Next: References Up: ont1 Previous: ont1



David M. Glover
Wed Aug 13 18:31:53 EDT 1997