Mapping the Energy Cascade in the North Atlantic Ocean: The Coarse-graining Approach
Hussein Aluie, Matthew Hecht, and Geoffrey K. Vallis

TL;DR
This paper introduces a coarse-graining framework to analyze nonlinear energy transfer in ocean flows, providing detailed spatial maps and revealing complex regional energy cascade behaviors in the North Atlantic.
Contribution
It presents a novel, fully nonlinear, spatially localized method for measuring energy transfer in ocean turbulence, overcoming limitations of traditional spectral tools.
Findings
Upscale energy transfer dominates in most regions.
Certain areas near Gulf Stream show downscale transfer.
Average energy transfer is upscale over large regions.
Abstract
A coarse-graining framework is implemented to analyze nonlinear processes, measure energy transfer rates and map out the energy pathways from simulated global ocean data. Traditional tools to measure the energy cascade from turbulence theory, such as spectral flux or spectral transfer rely on the assumption of statistical homogeneity, or at least a large separation between the scales of motion and the scales of statistical inhomogeneity. The coarse-graining framework allows for probing the fully nonlinear dynamics simultaneously in scale and in space, and is not restricted by those assumptions. This paper describes how the framework can be applied to ocean flows. Energy transfer between scales is not unique due to a gauge freedom. Here, it is argued that a Galilean invariant subfilter scale (SFS) flux is a suitable quantity to properly measure energy scale-transfer in the Ocean. It is…
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