Turbulent disruption of density staircases in stratified shear flows
Nicolaos Petropoulos, Ali Mashayek, Colm-cille P. Caulfield

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the formation of density staircases in stratified turbulent flows, finding that high turbulent Prandtl numbers typical in oceans inhibit staircase formation, explaining their rarity in ocean interiors.
Contribution
The study introduces reduced order models to determine conditions under which density staircases can form, highlighting the critical role of turbulent Prandtl number thresholds.
Findings
Density staircases are unlikely in ocean interiors due to high turbulent Prandtl numbers.
Phillips mechanism only operates at low turbulent Prandtl numbers.
Robustness of results across different energy dissipation scalings.
Abstract
Formation of step-like 'density staircase' distributions induced by stratification and turbulence has been widely studied and can be explained by the 'instability' of a sufficiently strongly stably stratified turbulent flow due to the decrease of the turbulent density flux with increasing stratification via the 'Phillips mechanism'. However, such density staircases are not often observed in ocean interiors, except in regions where double diffusion processes are important, leading to thermohaline staircases. Using reduced order models for the evolution of velocity and density gradients, we analyse staircase formation in stratified and sheared turbulent flows. Under the assumption of inertial scaling for the kinetic energy dissipation rate , where and are characteristic velocity and length scales, we determine ranges of bulk Richardson numbers…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research · Geological formations and processes
