eos.
swSTrho(temperature, density, pressure, eos = getOption("oceEOS", default = "gsw"))swRho."unesco" [1,2] or "gsw"
[3,4].eos="unesco", or Absolute Salinity, if
eos="gsw".
eos="unesco", finds the practical salinity that yields the given
density, with the given in-situ temperature and pressure. The method is a
bisection search with a salinity tolerance of 0.001. For eos="gsw",
the function gsw_SA_from_rho in the gsw
package is used
to infer Absolute Salinity from Conservative Temperature.
2. Gill, A.E., 1982. Atmosphere-ocean Dynamics, Academic Press, New York, 662 pp.
3. IOC, SCOR, and IAPSO (2010). The international thermodynamic equation of seawater-2010: Calculation and use of thermodynamic properties. Technical Report 56, Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission, Manuals and Guide.
4. McDougall, T.J. and P.M. Barker, 2011: Getting started with TEOS-10 and the Gibbs Seawater (GSW) Oceanographic Toolbox, 28pp., SCOR/IAPSO WG127, ISBN 978-0-646-55621-5.
swTSrhoOther functions that calculate seawater properties: T68fromT90,
T90fromT48, T90fromT68,
swAbsoluteSalinity,
swAlphaOverBeta, swAlpha,
swBeta, swCSTp,
swConservativeTemperature,
swDepth, swDynamicHeight,
swLapseRate, swN2,
swPressure, swRho,
swRrho, swSCTp,
swSigma0, swSigma1,
swSigma2, swSigma3,
swSigma4, swSigmaTheta,
swSigmaT, swSigma,
swSoundAbsorption,
swSoundSpeed, swSpecificHeat,
swSpice, swTFreeze,
swTSrho,
swThermalConductivity,
swTheta, swViscosity,
swZ
swSTrho(10, 22, 0, eos="gsw") # 28.76285
swSTrho(10, 22, 0, eos="unesco") # 28.651625
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab