Internal wave pressure, velocity, and energy flux from density perturbations
Michael R. Allshouse, Frank M. Lee, Philip J. Morrison, Harry L., Swinney

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Green's function-based method to determine instantaneous pressure, velocity, and energy flux fields in density-varying fluids using only density perturbation data, validated through simulations and laboratory experiments.
Contribution
The authors develop and validate a novel method to compute energy flux fields from density perturbations alone, enabling measurements without direct pressure or velocity data.
Findings
Method achieves within 1% accuracy in simulations.
Method achieves within 6% accuracy in laboratory measurements.
Applicable to systems with linear density perturbations.
Abstract
Determination of energy transport is crucial for understanding the energy budget and fluid circulation in density varying fluids such as the ocean and the atmosphere. However, it is rarely possible to determine the energy flux field , which requires simultaneous measurements of the pressure and velocity perturbation fields, and . We present a method for obtaining the instantaneous from density perturbations alone: a Green's function-based calculation yields , and is obtained by integrating the continuity equation and the incompressibility condition. We validate our method with results from Navier-Stokes simulations: the Green's function method is applied to the density perturbation field from the simulations, and the result for is found to agree typically to within with …
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