Flow tracer
A flow tracer is any fluid property used to track flow. The concentration of a chemical compound in the fluid can be used as a chemical tracer, and characteristics such as temperature are physical tracers. Tracers may be artificially introduced, like dye tracers, or they may be naturally occurring; radioactive tracers may be either. Conservative tracers remain constant following fluid parcels, whereas reactive tracers (such as compounds undergoing a mutual chemical reaction) grow or decay with time.
Active tracers dynamically alter the flow of the fluid by changing fluid properties which appear in the equation of motion such as density or viscosity, while passive tracers have no influence on flow.
Tracers are used in oceanography to deduce flow patterns in the ocean. Common examples include potential temperature, salinity, and concentration of CFCs, tritium (introduced to the ocean surface by atomic bomb tests), oxygen, and many other compounds.
When 28,000 Friendly Floatees plastic ducks and other toys were washed overboard from a container ship in the Pacific Ocean in 1992, oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer used them for the calibration and verification of ocean current models.[1]
See also
References
- ↑ Ebbesmeyer, Curtis C. "Beachcombing Science from Bath Toys". Beachcombers' Alert. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
- R. E. Davis (1991). "Lagrangian Ocean Studies". Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics 23: 43–64. Bibcode:1991AnRFM..23...43D. doi:10.1146/annurev.fl.23.010191.000355.
External links
- ctraj Library of advection codes, including passive tracer modelling.