Damping effects of viscous dissipation on growth of symmetric instability
Laur Ferris, Donglai Gong

TL;DR
This paper investigates how viscous dissipation influences the growth of symmetric instability in the ocean, showing that turbulence can damp SI growth and explaining its rarity in observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates through numerical analysis that ambient turbulence suppresses SI growth, highlighting the importance of viscous effects in realistic ocean conditions.
Findings
Viscous effects restrict SI wavelength range.
Turbulence elongates SI growth timescale.
Viscous damping explains SI rarity in the ocean.
Abstract
Symmetric instability (SI) is a frontal instability arising from the interaction of rotation with lateral and vertical shear of a frontal jet and is a generalization of shear, centrifugal, and gravitational instabilities. While the onset of SI has been studied in numerous observations and models, intuition about its growth in physical ocean comes primarily from constant-viscosity linear instability analysis and large eddy simulation (LES). A forward cascade arising from SI in the real ocean, where numerous fine-to-microscale processes interact with growing SI velocity cells, is less understood. While many instances of symmetrically unstable flow have been observed, observations of enhanced turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) dissipation () at these sites are less common. We use numerical instability analysis of an idealized geostrophic jet to show that viscous-diffusive effects of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Rheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies · Tribology and Lubrication Engineering
