4.7 Article

Mean and Turbulent Characteristics of a Bottom Mixing-Layer Forced by a Strong Surface Tide and Large Amplitude Internal Waves

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 127, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JC017055

Keywords

nonlinear internal waves; internal tides; bottom boundary-layer; bottom mixing-layer; boundary-layer turbulence; inertial-sublayer

Categories

Funding

  1. ARC Industrial Transformation Research Hub for Offshore Floating Facilities [IH140100012]
  2. ARC [DP140101322, DP180101736]

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This study presents observations of the mean and turbulent field of a bottom mixing-layer at a gently sloping continental shelf site influenced by tides and nonlinear internal waves. The study finds that the thickness of the mixing-layer varies at both semidiurnal and sub-tidal frequencies, with an average thickness of around 10 meters. The compression and expansion of the mixing-layer by internal tides and nonlinear internal waves affects the mean velocity profiles.
We present 15 days of both mean and turbulent field observations bottom mixing-layer at a gently sloping 250 m deep continental shelf site, energized by tides and nonlinear internal waves (NLIWs). The tidal frequency forcing was due to the combined effects of the barotropic tide and a mode-1 internal tide (IT), while the NLIWs were predominantly mode-1 waves of depression. The bottom mixing-layer thickness varied at both semidiurnal and sub-tidal similar to O(10)d frequencies, with an average thickness of around 10 m. Compression and expansion of the mixing-layer by both the IT and NLIWs affected the mean velocity profiles in the mixing-layer, while the phasing between the barotropic and baroclinic flows led to an asymmetry in mean velocity profiles between periods of rising and falling isotherms. With the exception of periods of flow reversal, the turbulent kinetic energy balance and turbulent stress observations were consistent with the existence of an inertial-sublayer with thickness of approximately 10%-15% of the mixing-layer thickness ( similar to 1 m), even beneath NLIWs. In the outer portion of the mixing-layer-that is, above the inertial-sublayer-NLIWs modulated the local turbulence spectra. We discuss the observations in the context of a predictive model for mixing-layer thickness. The analysis suggests that the high-frequency variability in mixing-layer thickness was dominated by internal wave pumping, though strength of the ambient stratification and the frequency of the forcing were important controls on the time-averaged (sub-tidal) variation.

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