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Mixing at the head of a canyon : a laboratory investigation of fluid exchanges in a rotating, stratified basin
Authors
Browand
Carter
+30 more
Davies
De Silva
Dickinson
Dillon
Fernando
Fleury
Gardner
Griffiths
Griffiths
Helfrich
Hickey
Hopfinger
Hopfinger
Hunkins
Ivey
Kunze
Ledwell
Linden
Lueck
Montgomery
Munk
Nof
Oster
Ozmidov
Polzin
St. Laurent
Thorpe
Thorpe
Turner
Wells
Publication date
5 December 2006
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 111 (2006): C12004, doi:10.1029/2006JC003667.Observations indicate that oceanic mixing is intensified near the head of submarine canyons. How the presence of canyon walls affects the local production and distribution of mixed fluid is an open question. These dynamics are addressed through rotating tank experiments which impose mixing at middepth at the closed end of a channel open to a larger body of water. Turbulence is generated in a linearly stratified fluid with initial buoyancy frequency N by means of a single bar oscillated with frequency ω. The mixed fluid quickly reaches a steady state height h ∼ (ω/N)1/2 independent of the Coriolis frequency f and collapses into the channel interior. A small percentage of the fluid exported from the turbulent zone enters a boundary current. The bulk forms a cyclonic circulation in front of the bar. As the recirculation cell expands to fill the channel, it restricts horizontal entrainment into the turbulent zone. Mixed fluid flux decays with time as t inline equation and is dependent on the size of the mixing zone and the balance between turbulence, rotation, and stratification. The recirculation cell is confined within the channel, and export of mixed fluid into the basin is restricted to the weak boundary current. As horizontal entrainment is shut down, long-term production of mixed fluid relies more on vertical entrainment. However, the scalings indicate that short-term dynamics are the most applicable to oceanic conditions.This work was supported by the Ocean Ventures Fund, the Westcott Fund, and the WHOI Academic Programs Office. Financial support was also provided by the National Science Foundation through grant OCE-9616949
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