| swRrho {oce} | R Documentation |
Compute density ratio
swRrho(
ctd,
sense = c("diffusive", "finger"),
smoothingLength = 10,
df,
eos = getOption("oceEOS", default = "gsw")
)
ctd |
an object of class |
sense |
an indication of the sense of double diffusion under study and therefore of the definition of Rrho; see ‘Details’ |
smoothingLength |
ignored if |
df |
if given, this is provided to |
eos |
equation of state, either |
This computes Rrho (density ratio) from a ctd object.
If eos="unesco", this is done by calculating salinity and
potential-temperature derivatives from smoothing splines whose properties
are governed by smoothingLength or df. If
sense="diffusive" the definition is
(beta*dS/dz)/(alpha*d(theta)/dz) and
the reciprocal for "finger".
If eos="gsw", this is done by extracting absolute salinity and
conservative temperature, smoothing with a smoothing spline as in the
"unesco" case, and then calling gsw::gsw_Turner_Rsubrho()
on these smoothed fields. Since the gsw function works on mid-point
pressures, approx() is used to interpolate back to the original
pressures.
If the default arguments are acceptable, ctd[["Rrho"]] may be used
instead of swRrho(ctd).
Density ratio defined in either the "diffusive" or
"finger" sense.
Dan Kelley and Chantelle Layton
Other functions that calculate seawater properties:
T68fromT90(),
T90fromT48(),
T90fromT68(),
swAbsoluteSalinity(),
swAlphaOverBeta(),
swAlpha(),
swBeta(),
swCSTp(),
swConservativeTemperature(),
swDepth(),
swDynamicHeight(),
swLapseRate(),
swN2(),
swPressure(),
swRho(),
swSCTp(),
swSTrho(),
swSigma0(),
swSigma1(),
swSigma2(),
swSigma3(),
swSigma4(),
swSigmaTheta(),
swSigmaT(),
swSigma(),
swSoundAbsorption(),
swSoundSpeed(),
swSpecificHeat(),
swSpice(),
swTFreeze(),
swTSrho(),
swThermalConductivity(),
swTheta(),
swViscosity(),
swZ()
library(oce)
data(ctd)
u <- swRrho(ctd, eos="unesco")
g <- swRrho(ctd, eos="gsw")
p <- ctd[["p"]]
plot(u, p, ylim=rev(range(p)), type='l', xlab=expression(R[rho]))
lines(g, p, lty=2, col='red')
legend("topright", lty=1:2, legend=c("unesco", "gsw"), col=c("black", "red"))