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7.9: Important Concepts

  • Page ID
    30094
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    1. Gravity, buoyancy, and wind are the dominant forces acting on the ocean.
    2. Earth’s rotation produces a pseudo-force, the Coriolis force.
    3. Conservation laws applied to flow in the ocean lead to equations of motion. Conservation of salt, volume and other quantities can lead to deep insights into oceanic flow.
    4. The transformation from equations of motion applied to fluid parcels to equations applied at a fixed point in space greatly complicates the equations of motion. The linear, first-order, ordinary differential equations describing Newtonian dynamics of a mass accelerated by a force become nonlinear, partial differential equations of fluid mechanics.
    5. Flow in the ocean can be assumed to be incompressible except when describing sound. Density can be assumed to be constant except when density is multiplied by gravity \(g\). The assumption is called the Boussinesq approximation.
    6. Conservation of mass leads to the continuity equation, which has an especially simple form for an incompressible fluid.

    This page titled 7.9: Important Concepts is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Robert H. Stewart via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.