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Diapycnal Mixing in the Ocean: From Dissipation Scale to Large Scale Meridional Overturning CirculationMashayekhi, Alireza 13 January 2014 (has links)
In this thesis we will investigate the role of diapycnal mixing on the ocean general circulation.
This thesis is divided into three main parts.
In the first part we show that there exists an almost infinite number of pathways to turbulence in oceanic energetic shear zones at high Reynolds number. Such a large number of accessible routes to truly chaotic motion is not typical of most of the existing body of laboratory and numerical experiments of shear-induced diapycnal mixing, but is shown to be of relevance to diapycnal mixing in geophysical flows.
A key finding is that the use of generally accepted empirical relations based on laboratory experiments for the quantification of diapycnal mixing leads to large inaccuracies.
In the second part we perform high resolution numerical experiments of diapycnal mixing in the oceanographically relevant high Reynolds number parameter range. Through detailed analysis of the flow energetics and mixing properties of these flows, we show that the net buoyancy flux facilitated by turbulence, the efficiency of diapycnal mixing, and the resultant effective diffusivity, all depend in non-trivial ways on the specific route to turbulence for each individual mixing event. This has important implications for practical methods of estimating an effective diapycnal mixing diffusivity from observations as well as for parametrization of mixing in ocean general circulation models. We show quantitatively that such methods can be inaccurate to the extent that they will need to be completely revised or replaced.
In the third and final part of the thesis we investigate the sensitivity of the meridional overturning circulation of the abyssal ocean to the intensity and spatial variations of diapycnal mixing. We show that changes in intensity of mixing by factors well within the errors associated with practical estimates (as discussed above) lead to significant changes in ocean circulation.
We show that enhanced abyssal mixing, surface winds, and meso-scale eddies play leading roles in driving the abyssal ocean circulation and in setting the stratification. As an example of the application of our analysis we show that proper parametrization of enhanced abyssal mixing leads to realization of the important role of the (often neglected) geothermal heat flux in driving the Antarctic Bottom Water circulation.
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Diapycnal Mixing in the Ocean: From Dissipation Scale to Large Scale Meridional Overturning CirculationMashayekhi, Alireza 13 January 2014 (has links)
In this thesis we will investigate the role of diapycnal mixing on the ocean general circulation.
This thesis is divided into three main parts.
In the first part we show that there exists an almost infinite number of pathways to turbulence in oceanic energetic shear zones at high Reynolds number. Such a large number of accessible routes to truly chaotic motion is not typical of most of the existing body of laboratory and numerical experiments of shear-induced diapycnal mixing, but is shown to be of relevance to diapycnal mixing in geophysical flows.
A key finding is that the use of generally accepted empirical relations based on laboratory experiments for the quantification of diapycnal mixing leads to large inaccuracies.
In the second part we perform high resolution numerical experiments of diapycnal mixing in the oceanographically relevant high Reynolds number parameter range. Through detailed analysis of the flow energetics and mixing properties of these flows, we show that the net buoyancy flux facilitated by turbulence, the efficiency of diapycnal mixing, and the resultant effective diffusivity, all depend in non-trivial ways on the specific route to turbulence for each individual mixing event. This has important implications for practical methods of estimating an effective diapycnal mixing diffusivity from observations as well as for parametrization of mixing in ocean general circulation models. We show quantitatively that such methods can be inaccurate to the extent that they will need to be completely revised or replaced.
In the third and final part of the thesis we investigate the sensitivity of the meridional overturning circulation of the abyssal ocean to the intensity and spatial variations of diapycnal mixing. We show that changes in intensity of mixing by factors well within the errors associated with practical estimates (as discussed above) lead to significant changes in ocean circulation.
We show that enhanced abyssal mixing, surface winds, and meso-scale eddies play leading roles in driving the abyssal ocean circulation and in setting the stratification. As an example of the application of our analysis we show that proper parametrization of enhanced abyssal mixing leads to realization of the important role of the (often neglected) geothermal heat flux in driving the Antarctic Bottom Water circulation.
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Geochemical tracers of Arctic river watersGuay, Christopher K. H. 30 July 1999 (has links)
Graduation date: 2000
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The kinematics and dynamics of cross-hemispheric flow in the Central and Eastern Equatorial PacificBrown, Jaclyn Nicole, School of Mathematics, UNSW January 2005 (has links)
This thesis concerns two topics: the kinematics of Pacific cross-equatorial flow ??? the location, timing and magnitude of the flow; and their dynamics???what are the driving forces controlling the flow? Despite extensive observations in the central and eastern Pacific, observations of these flows remain contradictory. We use output from an Ocean General Circulation Model (OGCM) viewed from a Lagrangian framework on density layers. This addresses the problem of high variability due to features such as Tropical Instability Waves. The annual mean flow is found to be southward nearly everywhere, east of 140??W. Flow becomes stronger in the second half of the year due to a bolus transport of very light surface water, introduced by Tropical Instability Waves. A Tropical Cell pattern occurs along the equator that does not require diapycnal downwelling. From 160??E to 160??W the annual mean flow is northward, occurring mostly in the mixed layer, appearing to originate partly from the Equatorial Undercurrent surfacing in the east. The northward flow is strongest in March and becomes southward in September. The wind stress and nonlinear terms are shown to be the key driving features, with a prescribed biharmonic Smagorinsky horizontal friction scheme having negligible impact. From 160??E to 160??W, the flow is partly accounted for by an Ekman forcing, with the curl of the nonlinear term providing a crucial additional torque, more than doubling the magnitude in some instances. From 160??W to 120??W the wind stress curl provides a weak southward flow of about 1 Sv, which increases by the nonlinear addition to around 5 Sv. The curl of the steady component of the nonlinear term, derived from annual mean currents, is similar in structure to the total nonlinear term, but higher in magnitude. The structure of the variable term, which was mostly of opposite sign to the steady term, suggests damping occurs in place of friction. While our study is limited to an examination of the model's characteristics, our results provide important clues to the observed flow patterns not resolved by present-day measurements. This study also highlights the importance of time-space variability and both horizontal and vertical density structure in controlling the flow and its feedback on the system.
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Dynamics of potential vorticity fronts /Boss, Emmanuel, January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1996. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [147]-157).
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Seasonal oscillations in a mid-latitude ocean with barriers to deep flow /Firing, Eric. January 1979 (has links)
Thesis--Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 263-265).
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Deep water exchange in Fortune Bay, Newfoundland /De Young, Bradley, January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.) -- Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1984. / Bibliography : leaves 109-111. Also available online.
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Transport and diffusion on the southwestern Puerto Rican shelf /Kioroglou, Sotiris, January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.)--Memorial University of Newfoundland. / Restricted until October 1993. Typescript. Bibliography: leaves 142-144. Also available online.
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Quasigeostrophic flows and turbulence in a rotating homogeneous fluid /Colin de Verdeire, Alain. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1977. / "March 1978." Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 167-170).
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The kinematics and dynamics of the New England continental shelf and shelf/slope front /Flagg, Charles N. January 1977 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1977. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 194-197).
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