Wave breaking in dense plumes

Sinking dense plumes are important in many oceanographic settings, notably the polar formation of deep and bottom waters. The dense water sources feeding such plumes are commonly affected by tidal modulation, leading to plume variability on short time scales. In a simple unsteady theory of one-dimen...

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Main Authors: Holland, Paul R., Hewitt, Richard E., Scase, Matthew M.
Format: Article
Published: American Meteorological Society 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29039/
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author Holland, Paul R.
Hewitt, Richard E.
Scase, Matthew M.
author_facet Holland, Paul R.
Hewitt, Richard E.
Scase, Matthew M.
author_sort Holland, Paul R.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Sinking dense plumes are important in many oceanographic settings, notably the polar formation of deep and bottom waters. The dense water sources feeding such plumes are commonly affected by tidal modulation, leading to plume variability on short time scales. In a simple unsteady theory of one-dimensional plumes (based on conservation equations for volume, momentum, and buoyancy), this plume variability is manifested as waves that travel down the resulting current. Using numerical techniques applied to the hyperbolic con- servation equations, this study investigates the novel concept that these waves may break as they travel down the plumes, triggering intense local mixing between the dense fluid and surrounding ocean. The results demonstrate that the waves break at geophysically relevant distances from the plume source. The location of wave breaking is very sensitive to plume drag from the seabed, the properties of the dense source, and the amplitude and period of the source modulation. To the extent that the simple model represents the real world, these results suggest that wave breaking originating from the tidal modulation of dense plumes could lead to a strong and previously unexplored source of local deep-ocean mixing.
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spelling nottingham-290392020-05-04T20:15:22Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29039/ Wave breaking in dense plumes Holland, Paul R. Hewitt, Richard E. Scase, Matthew M. Sinking dense plumes are important in many oceanographic settings, notably the polar formation of deep and bottom waters. The dense water sources feeding such plumes are commonly affected by tidal modulation, leading to plume variability on short time scales. In a simple unsteady theory of one-dimensional plumes (based on conservation equations for volume, momentum, and buoyancy), this plume variability is manifested as waves that travel down the resulting current. Using numerical techniques applied to the hyperbolic con- servation equations, this study investigates the novel concept that these waves may break as they travel down the plumes, triggering intense local mixing between the dense fluid and surrounding ocean. The results demonstrate that the waves break at geophysically relevant distances from the plume source. The location of wave breaking is very sensitive to plume drag from the seabed, the properties of the dense source, and the amplitude and period of the source modulation. To the extent that the simple model represents the real world, these results suggest that wave breaking originating from the tidal modulation of dense plumes could lead to a strong and previously unexplored source of local deep-ocean mixing. American Meteorological Society 2014-02 Article PeerReviewed Holland, Paul R., Hewitt, Richard E. and Scase, Matthew M. (2014) Wave breaking in dense plumes. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 44 (2). pp. 790-800. ISSN 0022-3670 bottom currents density currents wave breaking tides http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/JPO-D-13-0110.1 doi:10.1175/JPO-D-13-0110.1 doi:10.1175/JPO-D-13-0110.1
spellingShingle bottom currents
density currents
wave breaking
tides
Holland, Paul R.
Hewitt, Richard E.
Scase, Matthew M.
Wave breaking in dense plumes
title Wave breaking in dense plumes
title_full Wave breaking in dense plumes
title_fullStr Wave breaking in dense plumes
title_full_unstemmed Wave breaking in dense plumes
title_short Wave breaking in dense plumes
title_sort wave breaking in dense plumes
topic bottom currents
density currents
wave breaking
tides
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29039/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29039/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29039/