btangy wrote:Those figures of THC are strictly cartoons for introductory physical oceanography classes. I wouldn't take them too seriously.
Yes, I know. But since that particular figure appears with considerable regularity, I feel compelled to point out that it's not even remotely accurate.
Measuring the strength of the THC is really difficult observationally, and any such attempt would probably have error bars larger than any signal.
Yeah. Bryden et. al. says +/- 6 Sverdrups, which is pretty huge.
Unlike the atmosphere, think about what 'observations' (e.g. their density, time resolution, spatial resolution (esp. in the vertical)) we really have in the ocean. Most physical oceanography work needs to use models, but there are very few observations to constrain them.
Yeah, that's my dad's field, so I've observed that up close all my life.
The problem I have with Bill Gray, as does most of the rest of the research community, is that although he is very vocal with this theories, he chooses to voice them in speaking engagements and editorials rather than peer reviewed journals. So far, I've been disappointed that Dr. Gray has chosen not to present his work, which he claims is very robust, to the research community first. That is how one generates discussion, stimulates further research on the topic, and gains credibility. Running to the WSJ editorial section to generate controversy is bad for the science, IMO.
Yeah, well. I spent a fair amount of time trying to make sense of his powerpoint presentations from the AMS and Hurricane conferences in recent years and I'm afraid there's a lot of muddled thinking there.