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Eric D'Asaro

Senior Principal Oceanographer

Professor, Oceanography

Email

dasaro@apl.washington.edu

Phone

206-685-2982

Research Interests

Physical Oceanography, Internal Waves, Air-Sea Interaction, Upper Ocean Dynamics, Arctic Oceanography, Ocean Instrumentation

Biosketch

Dr. D'Asaro's research spans a wide number of environments from upper ocean mixed layers to nearshore coastal fronts to fjords to deep convection. Starting from a core interest in turbulence and internaI waves, it has expanded to include new aspects of small-scale oceanography, including submesoscale processes, and the role of all of these mixing processes in controlling biochemical processes in the ocean, including the distribution and fluxes of ocean gases exchange and biological productivity. By measuring big signals, like hurricanes or major blooms, it is easier to unravel the underlying processes because the signal to noise is high.

For the past 30 years, D'Asaro’s experimental work has focused on exploiting the unique capabilities of "Lagrangian Floats," a class of instruments that try to accurately follow the three dimensional motion of water parcels particularly in regions of strong mixing. This turns out to be a novel but effective way to measure turbulence in regions of strong mixing. Lagrangian techniques have not been used very much in measuring mixing and turbulence. Accordingly one of the more exciting aspects of this work is learning how to use Lagrangian floats in the ocean. This understanding draws both upon basic ideas in fluid mechanics and upon understanding of mixing in the ocean. It strongly influences float design, use, and the oceanographic problems studied. The work thus spans a wide range of topics, from fluid mechanics to oceanography to engineering. That makes it particularly fun and interesting.

Chemical species in the ocean and many microbial plants and animals drift with the ocean currents. Floats mimic this behavior, making them excellent platforms for studying aspects of ocean chemistry and biology. There is an ongoing revolution in these fields as electronic sensors become capable of making measurements formerly possible only in the laboratory. Floats equipped with such sensors are potentially very powerful tools. Dr. D'Asaro works to realize this potential, which is especially challenging and interesting as he collaborates with ocean biologists and chemists to design and operate multidisciplinary floats.

Department Affiliation

Ocean Physics

Education

B.A. Physics, Harvard University, 1976

M.S. Applied Physics, Harvard University, 1976

Ph.D. Oceanography, MIT/WHOI, 1980

Projects

Wave Measurements at Ocean Weather Station PAPA

As part of a larger project to understand the impact of surface waves on the ocean mixed layer, APL-UW is measuring waves at Ocean Weather Station Papa, a long-term observational site at N 50°, W 145°.

29 Aug 2019

Air–Sea Momentum Flux in Tropical Cyclones

The intensity of a tropical cyclone is influenced by two competing physical processes at the air–sea interface. It strengthens by drawing thermal energy from the underlying warm ocean but weakens due to the drag of rough ocean surface. These processes change dramatically as the wind speed increases above 30 m/s.

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30 Mar 2018

The project is driven by the following science questions: (1) How important are equilibrium-range waves in controlling the air-sea momentum flux in tropical cyclones? We hypothesize that for wind speeds higher than 30 m/s the stress on the ocean surface is larger than the equilibrium-range wave breaking stress. (2) How does the wave breaking rate vary with wind speed and the complex surface wave field? At moderate wind speeds the wave breaking rate increases with increasing speed. Does this continue at extreme high winds? (3) Can we detect acoustic signatures of sea spray at high winds? Measurements of sea spray in tropical cyclones are very rare. We will seek for the acoustic signatures of spray droplets impacting the ocean surface. (4) What are the processes controlling the air-sea momentum flux?

Salinity Processes in the Upper Ocean Regional Study — SPURS

The NASA SPURS research effort is actively addressing the essential role of the ocean in the global water cycle by measuring salinity and accumulating other data to improve our basic understanding of the ocean's water cycle and its ties to climate.

15 Apr 2015

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Videos

EXPORTS: Export Processes in the Ocean from RemoTe Sensing

The EXPORTS mission is to quantify how much of the atmospheric carbon dioxide fixed during primary production near the ocean surface is pumped to the deep twilight zone by biological processes, where it can be sequestered for months to millennia.

An integrated observation strategy leverages the precise, intense measurements made on ships, the persistent subsurface data collected by swimming and floating robots, and the global surface views provided by satellites.

18 Sep 2018

Lagrangian Submesoscale Experiment — LASER

A science team led by Eric D'Asaro conducted a unique mission to deploy over 1,000 ocean drifters in a small area of the Gulf of Mexico. The real-time data collected from the biodegradable drifters recalibrated understanding of ocean currents.

22 Jan 2018

Eddies Drive Particulate Carbon Deep in the Ocean During the North Atlantic Spring Bloom

The swirling eddies that create patches of stratification to hold phytoplankton near the sunlit surface during the North Atlantic spring bloom, also inject the floating organic carbon particles deep into the ocean. The finding, reported in Science, has important implications for the ocean's role in the carbon cycle on Earth: phytoplankton use carbon dioxide absorbed by the ocean from the atmosphere during the bloom and the resulting organic carbon near the sea surface is sequestered in the deep ocean.

27 Mar 2015

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Publications

2000-present and while at APL-UW

Curvature-induced subduction in a cyclonic eddy

Wu, W., L. Middleton, D.R. Tarry, E.A. D'Asaro, and A. Mahadevan, "Curvature-induced subduction in a cyclonic eddy," J. Phys. Oceanogr., 55, 2313-2334, doi:10.1175/JPO-D-25-0063.1, 2025.

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1 Dec 2025

In situ observations of a 10-km-scale elliptical cyclonic eddy reveal vertical subduction of chlorophyll-rich surface waters around the edges of the eddy where the flow curvature changes abruptly. The process is explained by relating flow curvature to horizontal divergence and vortex stretching using a theoretical framework that we develop in a local flow-following reference frame. The observed signatures of subduction, which extend from the surface to depths O(100) m, coincide with estimates from the variations of curvature number around the eddy, defined as Cu = V/(fR), where V is the speed, R is the radius of curvature, and f is the Coriolis parameter. An idealized model successfully simulates the observed subduction process, uncovering a three-dimensional pathway where surface waters within the cyclone subduct along the domed isopycnal surfaces and ultimately detach from the eddy as filaments. By decomposing the frontogenetic Q vector in the omega equation for vertical velocity, we identify the role of curvature-induced frontogenesis in driving subduction. Submesoscale flows exhibit highly curved flow paths, and curvature-induced frontogenesis, which differs from the traditionally emphasized confluence-induced frontogenesis, can play a significant role in modifying vertical transport.

Scaling near-surface observations of turbulent velocity in the ocean. Part 1: Surface layer

Zheng, Z., R.R. Harcourt, E.A. D'Asaro, and A.Y. Shcherbina, "Scaling near-surface observations of turbulent velocity in the ocean. Part 1: Surface layer," J. Phys. Oceanogr., 55, 1889-1903, doi:10.1175/JPO-D-24-0179.1, 2025.

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1 Oct 2025

Turbulence and mixing in the oceanic surface layer are critical for predictions of currents, stratification, and material transport. Conventional methods of representing unresolved turbulence rely on scaling relations that estimate the turbulence intensity from wind stress and surface buoyancy flux. In this study, we test these classic scaling relationships using vertical velocity measurements under a wide range of ocean conditions. Our results reveal higher vertical kinetic energy and substantial variability not captured by traditional scaling methods. We find that the additional variability is proportional to the magnitude of Stokes drift, a wave-following average of the surface wave orbital motion. A new empirical relationship that includes the effect of nonbreaking waves is proposed to characterize the additional dependence on wave forcing. These findings would benefit future development of turbulence parameterizations.

Increasing the low oxygen accuracy of commercial optodes

D'Asaro, E.A., C. McNeil, M. Altabet, and E. Garcia-Robledo, "Increasing the low oxygen accuracy of commercial optodes," J. Atmos. Ocean. Technol., 42, 1201-1215, doi:10.1175/JTECH-D-24-0107.1, 2025.

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1 Sep 2025

Subsurface regions of the ocean with very low oxygen concentrations are important in setting the overall ocean nutrient balance. They appear to be expanding and thus need to be monitored as the oceans change. This could be done using existing arrays of robotic floats, but the oxygen sensors used on these floats are not sufficiently sensitive. Here, we describe improvements in calibration for these sensors which can increase their sensitivity by about a factor of 10. This will allow robotic measurement of the extent and intensity of these low oxygen regions as they evolve in the future.

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In The News

NASA, NSF expedition to study ocean carbon embarks in August from Seattle

UW News, Hannah Hickey

Dozens of scientists, as well as underwater drones and other high-tech ocean instruments, will set sail from Seattle in mid-August. Funded by NASA and the National Science Foundation, the team will study the life and death of the small organisms that play a critical role in removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and in the ocean’s carbon cycle.

21 Jun 2018

Scientists watch ocean plastic hotspots form in real time

NewsDeeply, Erica Cirino

Researchers tracked hundreds of buoys deployed in the Gulf of Mexico. Not only did the buoys not spread out – many concentrated into an area the size of a football stadium. The findings may help scientists pinpoint areas for plastic or oil-spill cleanup.

6 Feb 2018

Temporary 'bathtub drains' in the ocean concentrate flotsam

UW News, Hannah Hickey

An experiment featuring the largest flotilla of sensors ever deployed in a single area provides new insights into how marine debris, or flotsam, moves on the surface of the ocean.

18 Jan 2018

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Acoustics Air-Sea Interaction & Remote Sensing Center for Environmental & Information Systems Center for Industrial & Medical Ultrasound Electronic & Photonic Systems Ocean Engineering Ocean Physics Polar Science Center
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