Off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridge

Internal wave breaking upon sloping seafloors is a potential source of turbulent mixing in the deep-ocean, but we lack details on off-bottom breaking. Turbulence processes are relevant for the dispersal away from the seafloor of suspended materials like those emanating from thermal vents and artific...

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Main Author: Hans van Haren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2019.1653137
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spelling doaj-92348e6b3b1842bf863a1362c8d3c6e72020-11-25T01:28:19ZengTaylor & Francis GroupTellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography1600-08702019-01-0171110.1080/16000870.2019.16531371653137Off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridgeHans van Haren0Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ) and Utrecht UniversityInternal wave breaking upon sloping seafloors is a potential source of turbulent mixing in the deep-ocean, but we lack details on off-bottom breaking. Turbulence processes are relevant for the dispersal away from the seafloor of suspended materials like those emanating from thermal vents and artificial mining activities. For the present study, high-resolution temperature sensors have been moored up to 406 m above a slope of a 2000 m deep crest of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. In addition to familiar observations of on-slope propagating highly nonlinear bores dominating turbulent mixing near and in contact with a sloping seafloor, the present observations show occasionally larger than 100 m tall turbulence expansions between 100 and 250 m above the seafloor at the transition from on- to off-slope flow. The details of such turbulence expansion are reminiscent of an asymmetric quasi-mode-2 internal hydraulic jump, with some specific differences compared with near-surface hydraulic jumps. As the expansion is generated at the transition from weak to steep edge of a saw-tooth internal tidal wave, it leads turbulence and stratification in two directions: One down to the seafloor in the direction of tidal phase propagation; the other more horizontally and slightly upward associated with near-homogeneous overturning remaining well away from the seafloor while preceding and sharpening near-bottom frontal bores. The mean turbulence dissipation rates O(10−8–10−7 m2s−3) associated with these expansions are half an order of magnitude less than those of on-slope propagating near-bottom bores, while about equal in duration. As for bores, their appearance, intensity and timing vary every tidal cycle.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2019.1653137geophysical and geological flowsinternal wavesstratified turbulencehydraulic jumpsocean observations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hans van Haren
spellingShingle Hans van Haren
Off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridge
Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
geophysical and geological flows
internal waves
stratified turbulence
hydraulic jumps
ocean observations
author_facet Hans van Haren
author_sort Hans van Haren
title Off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridge
title_short Off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridge
title_full Off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridge
title_fullStr Off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridge
title_full_unstemmed Off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridge
title_sort off-bottom turbulence expansions of unbounded flow over a deep-ocean ridge
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
issn 1600-0870
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Internal wave breaking upon sloping seafloors is a potential source of turbulent mixing in the deep-ocean, but we lack details on off-bottom breaking. Turbulence processes are relevant for the dispersal away from the seafloor of suspended materials like those emanating from thermal vents and artificial mining activities. For the present study, high-resolution temperature sensors have been moored up to 406 m above a slope of a 2000 m deep crest of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. In addition to familiar observations of on-slope propagating highly nonlinear bores dominating turbulent mixing near and in contact with a sloping seafloor, the present observations show occasionally larger than 100 m tall turbulence expansions between 100 and 250 m above the seafloor at the transition from on- to off-slope flow. The details of such turbulence expansion are reminiscent of an asymmetric quasi-mode-2 internal hydraulic jump, with some specific differences compared with near-surface hydraulic jumps. As the expansion is generated at the transition from weak to steep edge of a saw-tooth internal tidal wave, it leads turbulence and stratification in two directions: One down to the seafloor in the direction of tidal phase propagation; the other more horizontally and slightly upward associated with near-homogeneous overturning remaining well away from the seafloor while preceding and sharpening near-bottom frontal bores. The mean turbulence dissipation rates O(10−8–10−7 m2s−3) associated with these expansions are half an order of magnitude less than those of on-slope propagating near-bottom bores, while about equal in duration. As for bores, their appearance, intensity and timing vary every tidal cycle.
topic geophysical and geological flows
internal waves
stratified turbulence
hydraulic jumps
ocean observations
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2019.1653137
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