User Settings
Article

Deeper meaning to a glittering enigma

Jon Copley-2000-05-13-ePrints Soton (University of Southampton)
0

TL;DRAbstract

MYSTERIOUS spirals in the glitter of sunlight on the sea may reveal intricate mixing beneath the waves, say oceanographers in California.<br/>Thirty years ago, Apollo astronauts noticed spirals 10 to 25 kilometres across in the pattern of sunlight reflecting off the ocean. The patterns have been extensively photographed from the space shuttle, but no one knew why they formed.<br/><br/>Walter Munk and Larry Armi of the Scripps Institute of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, and their colleagues studied 400 photographs of the spirals in the archives of the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. They conclude that subsurface currents are the cause.<br/><br/>Wind conditions sometimes create linear "slicks" on the ocean that appear smoother than their surroundings. These regions contain increased concentrations of surfactants produced by fish and plankton. This raises the surface tension, and damps down the tiny waves that usually give the sea surface its r

Chat with Paper

AI Agents for this Paper

MYSTERIOUS spirals in the glitter of sunlight on the sea may reveal intricate mixing beneath the waves, say oceanographers in California.<br/>Thirty years ago, Apollo astronauts noticed spirals 10 to 25 kilometres across in the pattern of sunlight reflecting off the ocean. The patterns have been extensively photographed from the space shuttle, but no one knew why they formed.<br/><br/>Walter Munk and Larry Armi of the Scripps Institute of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, and their colleagues studied 400 photographs of the spirals in the archives of the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. They conclude that subsurface currents are the cause.<br/><br/>Wind conditions sometimes create linear "slicks" on the ocean that appear smoother than their surroundings. These regions contain increased concentrations of surfactants produced by fish and plankton. This raises the surface tension, and damps down the tiny waves that usually give the sea surface its r

Keywords

GeologyOceanographyBayMeteorologyGeography

Chat

Click to start Chat