Turbulent mixing driven by mean-flow shear and internal gravity waves in oceans and atmospheres
Helmut Z. Baumert

TL;DR
This paper develops a unified model of turbulence and internal gravity waves in oceans and atmospheres, integrating experimental, theoretical, and observational data to explain mixing processes driven by shear and wave interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel three-equation system combining turbulence and wave energy balances, incorporating eigen-waves and universal constants, to better understand stratified mixing in geophysical flows.
Findings
Eigen waves are suppressed in wind tunnel experiments.
Stable coexistence of turbulence and waves at high Richardson numbers.
Model aligns well with diverse observational data.
Abstract
This study starts with balances deduced by Baumert and Peters (2004, 2005) from results of stratified-shear experiments made in channels and wind tunnels by Itsweire (1984) and Rohr and Van Atta (1987), and of free-decay experiments in a resting stratified tank by Dickey and Mellor (1980). Using a modification of Canuto's (2002) ideas on turbulence and waves, these balances are merged with an (internal) gravity-wave energy balance presented for the open ocean by Gregg (1989), without mean-flow shear. The latter was augmented by a linear (viscous) friction term. Gregg's wave-energy source is interpreted on its long-wave spectral end as internal tides, topography, large-scale wind, and atmospheric low-pressure actions. In addition, internal eigen waves, generated by mean-flow shear, and the aging of the wave field from a virginal (linear) into a saturated state are taken into account.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Ocean Waves and Remote Sensing · Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
