APL-UW Home

Jobs
About
Campus Map
Contact
Privacy
Intranet

Louis St. Laurent

Senior Principal Oceanographer

Email

lstlaurent@apl.uw.edu

Research Interests

. Energy and thermodynamics of the oceans, turbulent properties, synergies between observations and modeling.
. Robotics, adaptive sampling, autonomy, and machine learning, unmanned systems for sensing, expeditionary measurements in remote and inaccessible areas.
. Oceanographic research with international partners.

Biosketch

Louis St. Laurent is a Senior Principal Oceanographer of the Applied Physics Laboratory at the University of Washington. His research interests include turbulent processes of the ocean and the use of robotic and autonomous systems to acquire measurements in areas inaccessible to conventional measurement methodologies. His research has specifically focused on the South China Sea, where tides, typhoons, and monsoons contribute to an extremely energetic turbulent cascade. He has also worked extensively in the Drake Passage region of the Southern Ocean and at mid-ocean ridges throughout the world. He received his B.S. in Physics from the University of Rhode Island and his Ph.D. in Physical Oceanography from the MIT/WHOI Joint Program. He was the 2012 recipient of the Fofonoff Award of the American Society of Oceanographers.

Education

B.S. Physics, University of Rhode Island, 1994

Ph.D. Physical Oceanography, MIT and WHOI, 1999

Publications

2000-present and while at APL-UW

Linking viral production to bacteria mortality and carbon cycling in the oligotrophic Pacific Ocean

Chen, P.W.-Y., C.N. Annabel, M. Olivia, G.-C. Gong, S. Jan, L. St. Laurent, L. Rainville, and A.-Y. Tsai, "Linking viral production to bacteria mortality and carbon cycling in the oligotrophic Pacific Ocean," 36, doi:10.1007/s44195-025-00114-9, 2025.

More Info

5 Nov 2025

Viruses are now a popular significant component of marine ecosystems and recognized as crucial contributors to elemental cycling within the microbial loop. While early study on viral community dynamics paid more focus on coastal environments, resulting in an underrepresentation of open ocean study. In this research, we measured the rates of viral production (VP) and assessed the viral processes from the surface to the deep sea (500 m), comparing bacterial losses due to viral lysis across depth. In summary, VP in surface water was ranged between 0.11 and 0.15 x 106 viruses mL-1 h-1, while at the deep chlorophyll maximum (DCM) layer, it varied from 0.08 to 0.22 x 106 viruses mL-1 h-1. The lowest rates of VP were found at a depth of 200 m ranging from 0.06 to 0.08 x 106 viruses mL-1 h-1. Our findings may also aid in elucidating the role of virus-mediated mortality (VMM) in bacterial populations. It is important to note that there was an increase in VMM from the surface to the deeper layers of the water column. We propose that the elevated viral mortality rates of bacteria in deeper aquatic environments correspond with the reduced grazing rates on bacteria by protists in these regions. Based on the estimation, we found about 49–60% at surface and 87–100% of bacterial production at the DCM layers organic matter released by virus lysing bacteria cells into dissolved organic carbon pools. This suggests that viral lysis may account for a substantial portion of the carbon demand for bacterial populations.

Revisiting issues in estimating spectra of ocean temperature microstructure

Ijichi, T., and L. St. Laurent, "Revisiting issues in estimating spectra of ocean temperature microstructure," J. Atmos. Ocean. Technol., 42, 1137-1148, doi:10.1175/JTECH-D-24-0087.1, 2025.

More Info

1 Sep 2025

This study revisits two distinct issues causing spectral distortion in temperature microstructure to better deal with recent widespread measurements from fast-response thermistors. First, the platform dependence of the thermistor response, which has not been well recognized before, is examined. Using simultaneously measured velocity shear and temperature microstructure data from a vertical microstructure profiler (VMP) and autonomous underwater gliders, this study estimates the shape of the thermistor response by treating the Kraichnan spectrum as the true spectrum. The estimated response of thermistors mounted on gliders exhibits clear vehicle speed dependence and attenuates more severely than those mounted on a VMP, while individual thermistor irregularities have only a minor effect. It remains unclear how platform vehicles influence the water boundary layer over a moving thermistor, but users are cautioned to take the vehicle type into account when correcting thermistor responses. Second, it is explored how response-corrected temperature gradient spectra deviate from the Kraichnan spectrum at low Reynolds numbers, with a special focus on poorly understood anisotropic spectra associated with salt fingers. Although signals of salt fingers are successfully isolated from those of shear-driven turbulence using criteria based on the density ratio Rρ and the buoyancy Reynolds number Reb, given by 1 < Rρ < 2 and Reb ~ O(1), any specific spectral deviations are not observed, apart from finestructure contamination characterized by a negative spectral slope, even in glider microstructure data containing a horizontal component. The evidence for the anisotropic salt-fingering +2 spectral slope, proposed exclusively in the 1980s, remains unconfirmed.

Revisiting issues in estimating spectra of ocean temperature microstructure

Ijichi, T., and L. St. Laurent, "Revisiting issues in estimating spectra of ocean temperature microstructure," J. Atmos. Ocean. Technol., 42, 1137-1148, doi:10.1175/JTECH-D-24-0087.1, 2025.

More Info

1 Sep 2025

This study revisits two distinct issues causing spectral distortion in temperature microstructure to better deal with recent widespread measurements from fast-response thermistors. First, the platform dependence of the thermistor response, which has not been well recognized before, is examined. Using simultaneously measured velocity shear and temperature microstructure data from a vertical microstructure profiler (VMP) and autonomous underwater gliders, this study estimates the shape of the thermistor response by treating the Kraichnan spectrum as the true spectrum. The estimated response of thermistors mounted on gliders exhibits clear vehicle speed dependence and attenuates more severely than those mounted on a VMP, while individual thermistor irregularities have only a minor effect. It remains unclear how platform vehicles influence the water boundary layer over a moving thermistor, but users are cautioned to take the vehicle type into account when correcting thermistor responses. Second, it is explored how response-corrected temperature gradient spectra deviate from the Kraichnan spectrum at low Reynolds numbers, with a special focus on poorly understood anisotropic spectra associated with salt fingers. Although signals of salt fingers are successfully isolated from those of shear-driven turbulence using criteria based on the density ratio Rρ and the buoyancy Reynolds number Reb, given by 1 < Rρ < 2 and Reb ~ O(1), any specific spectral deviations are not observed, apart from finestructure contamination characterized by a negative spectral slope, even in glider microstructure data containing a horizontal component. The evidence for the anisotropic salt-fingering +2 spectral slope, proposed exclusively in the 1980s, remains unconfirmed.

More Publications

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
Close

 

Close