Shortcut URL:http://2.u.is/.3zx66

Quicklinks:
- 120320142100- 120308101627- BP Oil Spill Hurt Marshes, but Recovery Possible, Experts Say- read more- 02120217115553- Deepwater Horizon Disaster Could Have Billion Dollar Impact- read more- Where Has All the Gulf Spill Oil Gone?- read more- Deep Plumes of Oil Could Cause Dead Zones in the Gulf- read more- Seagrasses Can Store as Much Carbon as Forests- Wind-Driver Tumbleweed Rover for Mars?- Fire Beetles: Forest Fire Early-Warning Systems- Artificial Leaf Uses Sun to Make Hydrogen- Light Pollution Transforming Insect Communities- Human-Like Spine Found in Aquatic Eel Fossil- Hearts Repaired Using Patients' Skin Cells- Cosmos Best to View 13 Billion Years Ago- Oil from Deepwater Horizon Disaster Entered Food Chain in the Gulf of Mexico- 120308101627- BP Oil Spill Hurt Marshes, but Recovery Possible, Experts Say- read more- 02120217115553- Deepwater Horizon Disaster Could Have Billion Dollar Impact- read more- Where Has All the Gulf Spill Oil Gone?- read more- Deep Plumes of Oil Could Cause Dead Zones in the Gulf- read more- Seagrasses Can Store as Much Carbon as Forests- Wind-Driver Tumbleweed Rover for Mars?- Fire Beetles: Forest Fire Early-Warning Systems- Artificial Leaf Uses Sun to Make Hydrogen- Light Pollution Transforming Insect Communities- Human-Like Spine Found in Aquatic Eel Fossil- Hearts Repaired Using Patients' Skin Cells- Cosmos Best to View 13 Billion Years Ago- read more- 120308101627- BP Oil Spill Hurt Marshes, but Recovery Possible, Experts Say- read more- 02120217115553- Deepwater Horizon Disaster Could Have Billion Dollar Impact- read more- Where Has All the Gulf Spill Oil Gone?- read more- Deep Plumes of Oil Could Cause Dead Zones in the Gulf- read more- Seagrasses Can Store as Much Carbon as Forests- Wind-Driver Tumbleweed Rover for Mars?- Fire Beetles: Forest Fire Early-Warning Systems- Artificial Leaf Uses Sun to Make Hydrogen- Light Pollution Transforming Insect Communities- Human-Like Spine Found in Aquatic Eel Fossil- Hearts Repaired Using Patients' Skin Cells- Cosmos Best to View 13 Billion Years Ago

Deepwater Horizon spill: New method successfully predicted how o
... from universities, journals, and other research organizations

Deepwater Horizon Spill: New Method Successfully Predicted How Oil Would Spread

ScienceDaily (Sep. 2, 2010) — Prompted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, a UC Santa Barbara scientist has come up with a new way of predicting how contaminants like oil will spread. He was able to forecast several days in advance that oil from that spill would wash ashore in particular parts of the Gulf of Mexico.

"We predicted where the oil was going to go," says Igor Mezic, a professor of mechanical engineering at UC Santa Barbara who studies fluid dynamics. "We were able to do 3-day predictions pretty accurately."

In a paper published online Sept. 2 in Science Express, Mezic, together with Sophie Loire, a postdoctoral fellow who works with Mezic, and colleagues at the software development company Aimdyn, Inc. in Santa Barbara and at NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi, describe how they predicted the movement of oil spilled into the Gulf of Mexico after an explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon rig on April 20.

In the following weeks, Mezic and his colleagues generated frequent forecasts of the movement of the spill and passed them on to those involved in the cleanup.

"We were on the phone with people, several days in advance, telling them where the oil was going to go," says Mezic, who began the work after watching coverage of the oil spill. "I looked at this problem on the TV and thought I could do something about it," he says. "I felt there could be a better set of theories to predict how oil will move."

Mezic and his colleagues successfully predicted where and when oil washed ashore in the Mississippi River Delta and later, on the white-sand beaches of Pensacola, Florida, and they forecast that the spill would then move east toward Panama City Beach. Their predictions were accurate to within a couple of miles of the actual extent of the spill later assessed by NOAA from aerial surveys.

It's not easy to predict how an oil slick will spread across the ocean, Mezic says, because of the large scale involved, and the constantly changing movement of water at the sea surface, driven largely by wind.

Mezic's new approach to the problem is based on computations that describe how slicks of oil tend to be stretched into filaments by motion at the sea surface. To produce predictions of oil movement after the Deepwater Horizon accident, the researchers incorporated forecasts of sea surface conditions from a U.S. Navy model.

Mezic says further refinements of this new methodology could be done in order to predict the spread of many other contaminants such as ash spewed out of an erupting volcano or warm air seeping into a climate-controlled building.

"It's pretty universal," Mezic says. "It could be applied to many different kinds of situations where a contaminant or heat is moved around by a liquid or gas."

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:

|

Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Santa Barbara, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Igor Mezic, S. Loire, Vladimir A. Fonoberov, and P. Hogan. A New Mixing Diagnostic and Gulf Oil Spill Movement. Science, 2010; DOI: 10.1126/science.1194607
APA

MLA

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Search ScienceDaily

Number of stories in archives: 118,726

Find with keyword(s):
 
Enter a keyword or phrase to search ScienceDaily's archives for related news topics,
the latest news stories, reference articles, science videos, images, and books.

 
  more breaking science news

Social Networks


Recommend and share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google +1:
Other bookmarking and sharing tools:
|

Breaking News

... from NewsDaily.com

In Other News ...

Copyright Reuters 2008. See Restrictions.

Free Subscriptions

... from ScienceDaily

Get the latest science news with our free email newsletters, updated daily and weekly. Or view hourly updated newsfeeds in your RSS reader:

Feedback

... we want to hear from you!

Tell us what you think of ScienceDaily -- we welcome both positive and negative comments. Have any problems using the site? Questions?

Post this page to your favorite social bookmarking site:
Include this item in your blog or web site:
Cite this article in your essay, paper, or report:
Email this page's link to a friend or colleague:

Quicklinks:
- 120320142100- 120308101627- BP Oil Spill Hurt Marshes, but Recovery Possible, Experts Say- read more- 02120217115553- Deepwater Horizon Disaster Could Have Billion Dollar Impact- read more- Where Has All the Gulf Spill Oil Gone?- read more- Deep Plumes of Oil Could Cause Dead Zones in the Gulf- read more- Seagrasses Can Store as Much Carbon as Forests- Wind-Driver Tumbleweed Rover for Mars?- Fire Beetles: Forest Fire Early-Warning Systems- Artificial Leaf Uses Sun to Make Hydrogen- Light Pollution Transforming Insect Communities- Human-Like Spine Found in Aquatic Eel Fossil- Hearts Repaired Using Patients' Skin Cells- Cosmos Best to View 13 Billion Years Ago- Oil from Deepwater Horizon Disaster Entered Food Chain in the Gulf of Mexico- 120308101627- BP Oil Spill Hurt Marshes, but Recovery Possible, Experts Say- read more- 02120217115553- Deepwater Horizon Disaster Could Have Billion Dollar Impact- read more- Where Has All the Gulf Spill Oil Gone?- read more- Deep Plumes of Oil Could Cause Dead Zones in the Gulf- read more- Seagrasses Can Store as Much Carbon as Forests- Wind-Driver Tumbleweed Rover for Mars?- Fire Beetles: Forest Fire Early-Warning Systems- Artificial Leaf Uses Sun to Make Hydrogen- Light Pollution Transforming Insect Communities- Human-Like Spine Found in Aquatic Eel Fossil- Hearts Repaired Using Patients' Skin Cells- Cosmos Best to View 13 Billion Years Ago- read more- 120308101627- BP Oil Spill Hurt Marshes, but Recovery Possible, Experts Say- read more- 02120217115553- Deepwater Horizon Disaster Could Have Billion Dollar Impact- read more- Where Has All the Gulf Spill Oil Gone?- read more- Deep Plumes of Oil Could Cause Dead Zones in the Gulf- read more- Seagrasses Can Store as Much Carbon as Forests- Wind-Driver Tumbleweed Rover for Mars?- Fire Beetles: Forest Fire Early-Warning Systems- Artificial Leaf Uses Sun to Make Hydrogen- Light Pollution Transforming Insect Communities- Human-Like Spine Found in Aquatic Eel Fossil- Hearts Repaired Using Patients' Skin Cells- Cosmos Best to View 13 Billion Years Ago