Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 October 2009
Summary
This book is to a large extent the second edition of The Ocean Circulation Inverse Problem, but it differs from the original version in a number of ways. While teaching the basic material at MIT and elsewhere over the past ten years, it became clear that it was of interest to many students outside of physical oceanography — the audience for whom the book had been written. The oceanographic material, instead of being a motivating factor, was in practice an obstacle to understanding for students with no oceanic background. In the revision, therefore, I have tried to make the examples more generic and understandable, I hope, to anyone with even rudimentary experience with simple fluid flows.
Also many of the oceanographic applications of the methods, which were still novel and controversial at the time of writing, have become familiar and almost commonplace. The oceanography, now confined to the two last chapters, is thus focussed less on explaining why and how the calculations were done, and more on summarizing what has been accomplished. Furthermore, the time-dependent problem (here called “state estimation” to distinguish it from meteorological practice) has evolved rapidly in the oceanographic community from a hypothetical methodology to one that is clearly practical and in ever-growing use.
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- Discrete Inverse and State Estimation ProblemsWith Geophysical Fluid Applications, pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006