4.7 Article

Evidence for ubiquitous preferential particle orientation in representative oceanic shear flows

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 63, Issue 1, Pages 122-143

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lno.10618

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research Coastal Geophysics and Optics program
  2. NASA Ocean Biology and Biogeochemistry [NNX15AR65G]
  3. NSF Ocean Technology Interdisciplinary Coordination [OCE-1634053]
  4. NSF Biological Oceanography [OCE-1657332]
  5. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute Foundation
  6. NASA [800557, NNX15AR65G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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In situ measurements were undertaken to characterize particle fields in undisturbed oceanic environments. Simultaneous, co-located depth profiles of particle fields and flow characteristics were recorded using a submersible holographic imaging system and an acoustic Doppler velocimeter, under different flow conditions and varying particle concentration loads, typical of those found in coastal oceans and lakes. Nearly one million particles with major axis lengths ranging from similar to 14 mu m to 11.6 mm, representing diverse shapes, sizes, and aspect ratios were characterized as part of this study. The particle field consisted of marine snow, detrital matter, and phytoplankton, including colonial diatoms, which sometimes formed thin layers of high particle abundance. Clear evidence of preferential alignment of particles was seen at all sampling stations, where the orientation probability density function (PDF) peaked at near horizontal angles and coincided with regions of low velocity shear and weak turbulent dissipation rates. Furthermore, PDF values increased with increasing particle aspect ratios, in excellent agreement with models of spheroidal particle motion in simple shear flows. To the best of our knowledge, although preferential particle orientation in the ocean has been reported in two prior cases, our findings represent the first comprehensive field study examining this phenomenon. Evidence of nonrandom particle alignment in aquatic systems has significant consequences to aquatic optics theory and remote sensing, where perfectly random particle orientation and thus isotropic symmetry in optical parameters is assumed. Ecologically, chain-forming phytoplankton may have evolved to form large aspect ratio chains as a strategy to optimize light harvesting.

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