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Fiber‐Optic Observations of Internal Waves and Tides

Ethan Williams, Arantza Ugalde, Hugo F. Martins, Carlos Becerril, Jörn Callies, Mariona Claret, María R. Fernández‐Ruiz, Miguel González‐Herráez, Sonia Martín‐López, Josep Lluís Pelegrí, Kraig B. Winters, Zhongwen Zhan

2023Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Although typically used to measure dynamic strain from seismic and acoustic waves, Rayleigh‐based distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) is also sensitive to temperature, offering longer range and higher sensitivity to small temperature perturbations than conventional Raman‐based distributed temperature sensing. Here, we demonstrate that ocean‐bottom DAS can be employed to study internal wave and tide dynamics in the bottom boundary layer, a region of enhanced ocean mixing but scarce observations. First, we show temperature transients up to about 4 K from a power cable in the Strait of Gibraltar south of Spain, associated with passing trains of internal solitary waves in water depth <200 m. Second, we show the propagation of thermal fronts associated with the nonlinear internal tide on the near‐critical slope of the island of Gran Canaria, off the coast of West Africa, with perturbations up to about 2 K at 1‐km depth and 0.2 K at 2.5‐km depth. With spatial averaging, we also recover a signal proportional to the barotropic tidal pressure, including the lunar fortnightly variation. In addition to applications in observational physical oceanography, our results suggest that contemporary chirped‐pulse DAS possesses sufficient long‐period sensitivity for seafloor geodesy and tsunami monitoring if ocean temperature variations can be separated.

Topics & Concepts

GeologyInternal waveSeafloor spreadingInternal tideBarotropic fluidOceanographySeismologyGeophysicsGeodesyClimatologyOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesSeismic Waves and AnalysisOcean Waves and Remote Sensing
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