gsw_gibbs {gsw} | R Documentation |
Gibbs Energy of Seawater, and its Derivatives
Description
Gibbs Energy of Seawater, and its Derivatives
Usage
gsw_gibbs(ns, nt, np, SA, t, p = 0)
Arguments
ns |
An integer, the order of the |
nt |
An integer, the order of the |
np |
An integer, the order of the |
SA |
Absolute Salinity [ g/kg ] |
t |
in-situ temperature (ITS-90) [ degC ] |
p |
sea pressure [dbar], i.e. absolute pressure [dbar] minus 10.1325 dbar |
Value
Gibbs energy [ J/kg ] if ns
=nt
=np
=0. Derivative of energy
with respect to SA
[ J/kg/(g/kg)^ns ] if ns
is nonzero and nt
=np
=0,
etc. Note that derivatives with respect to pressure are in units with Pa, not dbar.
Implementation Note
This R function uses a wrapper to a C function contained within the GSW-C system as updated 2021-12-28 at https://github.com/TEOS-10/GSW-C with git commit '98f0fd40dd9ceb0ba82c9d47ac750e935a7d0459'.
The C function uses data from the library/gsw_data_v3_0.mat
file provided in the GSW-Matlab source code, version 3.06-11.
Unfortunately, this version of the mat file is no longer displayed on the
TEOS-10.org website. Therefore, in the interests of making GSW-R be
self-contained, a copy was downloaded from
http://www.teos-10.org/software/gsw_matlab_v3_06_11.zip on 2022-05-25,
the .mat file was stored in the developer/create_data directory of
https://github.com/TEOS-10/GSW-R, and then the dataset used in GSW-R
was created based on that .mat file.
Please consult http://www.teos-10.org to learn more about the various TEOS-10 software systems.
Caution
The TEOS-10 webpage for gsw_gibbs
does not provide test values, so
the present R version should be considered untested.
References
http://www.teos-10.org/pubs/gsw/html/gsw_gibbs.html
Examples
library(gsw)
p <- seq(0, 100, 1)
SA <- rep(35, length(p))
t <- rep(-5, length(p))
## Check the derivative wrt pressure. Note the unit change
E <- gsw_gibbs(0, 0, 0, SA, t, p)
# Estimate derivative from linear fit (try plotting: it is very linear)
m <- lm(E ~ p)
print(summary(m))
plot(p, E)
abline(m)
dEdp1 <- coef(m)[2]
# Calculate derivative ... note we multiply by 1e4 to get from 1/Pa to 1/dbar
dEdp2 <- 1e4 * gsw_gibbs(0, 0, 1, SA[1], t[1], p[1])
## Ratio
dEdp1 / dEdp2