TY - JOUR
T1 - A comparison of black smoker hydrothermal plume behavior at Monolith Vent and at Clam Acres Vent Field
T2 - Dependence on source configuration
AU - Bemis, Karen G.
AU - Rona, Peter A.
AU - Jackson, Darrell
AU - Jones, Christopher
AU - Silver, Deborah
AU - Mitsuzawa, Kyohiko
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank D. R. Palmer of NOAA Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory for valuable discussion of the acoustics of hydrothermal plumes; H. S. Fleming, M. Czarnecki, and others of the Naval Research Laboratory for collaboration in acquisition of the East Pacific Rise acoustic images presented; U.S. Navy Submarine Development Group ONE for strong support acquiring the acoustic images presented using DSV Turtle in 1990 and DSV Sea Cliff in 1996; the NOAA West Coast and Polar National Undersea Research Program and the National Science Foundation Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF RIDGE Program grant OCE 98-18841) for funding; and the Institute of Marine and Coastal Studies at Rutgers University for contributing to support (KGB and PAR).
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - Quantitative visualization of acoustic images is used to compare the properties and behavior of high temperature hydrothermal plumes at two sites with different source configurations, increasing our understanding of how plume behavior reflects source configuration. Acoustic imaging experiments were conducted at the Clam Acres area of the Southwest Vent Field, 21°N East Pacific Rise and at Monolith Vent, North Cleft segment, Juan de Fuca Ridge. At Clam Acres, black smokers discharge from two adjacent chimneys which act as point sources, whereas multiple vents at Monolith Vent define a distributed elliptical source. Both plumes exhibit consistent dilution patterns, reasonable fits to the expected power law increase in centerline dilution with height, and simple bending of plume centerlines in response to ambient currents. Our data suggest that point source vents are associated with ordered plume structure, normal entrainment rates, and initial expansion of isosurfaces while distributed source vents are associated with disorganized plume structure, variable entrainment rates, and initial contraction of isosurfaces.
AB - Quantitative visualization of acoustic images is used to compare the properties and behavior of high temperature hydrothermal plumes at two sites with different source configurations, increasing our understanding of how plume behavior reflects source configuration. Acoustic imaging experiments were conducted at the Clam Acres area of the Southwest Vent Field, 21°N East Pacific Rise and at Monolith Vent, North Cleft segment, Juan de Fuca Ridge. At Clam Acres, black smokers discharge from two adjacent chimneys which act as point sources, whereas multiple vents at Monolith Vent define a distributed elliptical source. Both plumes exhibit consistent dilution patterns, reasonable fits to the expected power law increase in centerline dilution with height, and simple bending of plume centerlines in response to ambient currents. Our data suggest that point source vents are associated with ordered plume structure, normal entrainment rates, and initial expansion of isosurfaces while distributed source vents are associated with disorganized plume structure, variable entrainment rates, and initial contraction of isosurfaces.
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U2 - 10.1023/A:1022484931681
DO - 10.1023/A:1022484931681
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0036948751
SN - 0025-3235
VL - 23
SP - 81
EP - 96
JO - Marine Geophysical Researches
JF - Marine Geophysical Researches
IS - 2
ER -