Hi Paul -

I'm not sure if anyone else is ready to retire salinity as a
standard name meaning 'salinity on the practical salinity
scale'.

Also I still think your proposed definitions are a little too closely
tied to the teos-10 code and to the measurement/calculation
methods. For example, where does remotely sensed surface salinity
fit in? I'm really not sure, but I suspect it's reported on the PSS, but
without a conductivity observable in the "raw" data.

Which reminds me, do you want to add sea_surface_absolute_salinity
to your list?

Personally, I'd go with definitions closer to:
sea_water_salinity: Salt content of seawater on the Practical Salinity
Scale of 1978 (PSS-78), usually based on the electrical conductivity
of seawater.


sea_water_absolute_salinity
Definition: The mass fraction of salts in seawater as defined by the
Thermodynamic Equation Of Seawater - 2010 (TEOS-10), which
includes corrections for spatial variations in the composition of
seawater.

Cheers -
Nan


On 7/6/11 9:45 PM, paul.dur...@csiro.au wrote:
Fair point Nan..

We should then do this..

Convert the current "sea_water_salinity" (to be discontinued in its use) to be an alias 
of the new standard name "sea_water_practical_salinity".

An updated definition for "sea_water_absolute_salinity" following your suggestion is 
included below, plus a new definition for "sea_water_practical_salinity".

I would recommend each of the new standard names also has an additional copy created, 
with the prefix "change_over_time_in_*"

***
sea_water_conservative_temperature
Definition: Conservative Temperature is potential enthalpy divided by a fixed 
value of the specific heat of seawater, namely cp_0 = 3991.86795711963 J kg-1 
K-1.  Conservative temperature is designed to be as close as possible to 
potential temperature, but is two orders of magnitude more conservative in the 
ocean.  Because of this, Conservative Temperature can be regarded as being 
proportional to the heat content of seawater per unit mass.
Canonical units: K
Reference: www.teos-10.org

sea_water_absolute_salinity
Definition: Absolute Salinity, S_A, is the mass fraction of dissolved material 
in seawater.  In fact TEOS-10 estimates Absolute Salinity as the salinity 
variable that, when used with the TEOS-10 expression for density, yields the 
correct density of a seawater sample even when the sample is not of Standard 
Composition.  In practice Absolute Salinity is often calculated from Practical 
Salinity and a value of Absolute Salinity Anomaly which is found using computer 
software via a global look-up table.
Canonical units: g kg-1
Reference: www.teos-10.org

sea_water_practical_salinity
Definition: Practical Salinity, S_P, is defined on the Practical Salinity Scale 
of 1978 (PSS-78) and is calculated from the electrical conductivity of seawater 
(as well as temperature and pressure).
Canonical units: 1e-3, parts per thousand. Officially S_P is unitless, but 
often authors use psu, as in S_P = 35 psu.
Reference: www.teos-10.org

sea_water_preformed_salinity
Definition: Preformed Salinity is a salinity variable that is designed to be as 
conservative as possible, by removing the estimated biogeochemical influences 
on the seawater composition from other forms of salinity.
Canonical units: g kg-1
Reference: www.teos-10.org

sea_water_potential_enthalpy
Definition: Potential enthalpy is the enthalpy of a seawater parcel after an 
adiabatic and isohaline change in pressure from its in situ pressure to the sea 
pressure p = 0 dbar.
Canonical units: J kg-1
Reference: www.teos-10.org
***

So for clarity, the new proposed names are:

sea_water_conservative_temperature
sea_water_absolute_salinity
sea_water_practical_salinity
sea_water_preformed_salinity
sea_water_potential_enthalpy
change_over_time_in_sea_water_conservative_temperature
change_over_time_in_sea_water_absolute_salinity
change_over_time_in_sea_water_practical_salinity
change_over_time_in_sea_water_preformed_salinity
change_over_time_in_sea_water_potential_enthalpy

Cheers,

P

-----Original Message-----
From: cf-metadata-boun...@cgd.ucar.edu 
[mailto:cf-metadata-boun...@cgd.ucar.edu] On Behalf Of Nan Galbraith
Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2011 3:40 AM
To: cf-metadata@cgd.ucar.edu
Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] new TEOS-10 standard names

I agree that we probably need these names now. I'd like to
suggest, though, that the definition of absolute salinity should
start with the phrase 'mass fraction of salt in seawater', or
maybe 'concentration of salt in seawater'.

And while we're at it, we should probably consider revising the
definition of sea_water_salinity; currently all we have is: "The unit
of salinity is PSU, which is dimensionless. The units attribute
should be given as 1e-3 or 0.001 i.e. parts per thousand if
salinity is in PSU."

The units designation implies that we're using practical
salinity, but  the definition should probably be more explicit.
We could add something like "Salinity ratio on the Practical Salinity
Scale."

Cheers - Nan


On 7/6/11 3:35 AM, paul.dur...@csiro.au wrote:
I'd like to propose a series of new standard names, these names are associated 
with the recent release of the Thermodynamic Equation Of Seawater 2010 (TEOS-10 
- www.teos-10.org).

Additional to these names, I would also like to propose the 
"change_over_time_in_*" prefixes are also created.

The proposed new standard names, along with definition, units and reference 
details are below.

***
sea_water_conservative_temperature
Definition: Conservative Temperature is potential enthalpy divided by a fixed 
value of the specific heat of seawater, namely cp_0 = 3991.86795711963 J kg-1 
K-1.  Conservative temperature is designed to be as close as possible to 
potential temperature, but is two orders of magnitude more conservative in the 
ocean.  Because of this, Conservative Temperature can be regarded as being 
proportional to the heat content of seawater per unit mass.
Canonical units: K
Reference: www.teos-10.org

change_over_time_in_sea_water_conservative_temperature

sea_water_absolute_salinity
Definition: Absolute Salinity is the salinity variable that when used with the 
TEOS-10 expression for density yields the correct density of a seawater sample 
even when the sample is not of Standard Composition.  In practice Absolute 
Salinity is often calculated from Practical Salinity and a value of Absolute 
Salinity Anomaly which is found using computer software via a global look-up 
table.
Canonical units: g kg-1
Reference: www.teos-10.org

change_over_time_in_sea_water_absolute_salinity

sea_water_preformed_salinity
Definition: Preformed Salinity is a salinity variable that is designed to be as 
conservative as possible, by removing the estimated biogeochemical influences 
on the seawater composition from other forms of salinity.
Canonical units: g kg-1
Reference: www.teos-10.org

change_over_time_in_sea_water_preformed_salinity

sea_water_potential_enthalpy
Definition: Potential enthalpy is the enthalpy of a seawater parcel after an 
adiabatic and isohaline change in pressure from its in situ pressure to the sea 
pressure p = 0 dbar.
Canonical units: J kg-1
Reference: www.teos-10.org

change_over_time_in_sea_water_potential_enthalpy
***

Cheers,

P
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* Nan Galbraith                        (508) 289-2444 *
* Upper Ocean Processes Group            Mail Stop 29 *
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