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Published byBrittany Matthews Modified over 9 years ago
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Turbulent properties: - vary chaotically in time around a mean value - exhibit a wide, continuous range of scale variations - cascade energy from large to small spatial scales “Big whorls have little whorls Which feed on their velocity; And little whorls have lesser whorls, And so on to viscosity.” (Richardson, ~1920)
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- Use these properties of turbulent flows in the Navier Stokes equations - The only terms that have products of fluctuations are the advection terms - All other terms remain the same, e.g.,
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0 Reynolds stresses are the Reynolds stresses arise from advective (non-linear or inertial) terms
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Turbulent Kinetic Energy (TKE) An equation to describe TKE is obtained by multiplying the momentum equation for turbulent flow times the flow itself (scalar product) Total flow = Mean plus turbulent parts = Same for a scalar:
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Turbulent Kinetic Energy (TKE) Equation Multiplying turbulent flow times u i and dropping the primes Total changes of TKETransport of TKEShear Production Buoyancy Production Viscous Dissipation fluctuating strain rate Transport of TKE. Has a flux divergence form and represents spatial transport of TKE. The first two terms are transport of turbulence by turbulence itself: pressure fluctuations (waves) and turbulent transport by eddies; the third term is viscous transport
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interaction of Reynolds stresses with mean shear; represents gain of TKE represents gain or loss of TKE, depending on covariance of density and w fluctuations represents loss of TKE
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In many ocean applications, the TKE balance is approximated as:
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The largest scales of turbulent motion (energy containing scales) are set by geometry: - depth of channel - distance from boundary The rate of energy transfer to smaller scales can be estimated from scaling: u velocity of the eddies containing energy l is the length scale of those eddies u 2 kinetic energy of eddies l / u turnover time u 2 / (l / u ) rate of energy transfer = u 3 / l ~ At any intermediate scale l, But at the smallest scales L K, Kolmogorov length scale Typically, so that
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Shear production from bottom stress z u bottom Vertical Shears (vertical gradients)
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Shear production from wind stress z W u Vertical Shears (vertical gradients)
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Shear production from internal stresses z u1u1 Vertical Shears (vertical gradients) u2u2 Flux of momentum from regions of fast flow to regions of slow flow
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Parameterizations and representations of Shear Production Bottom stress: Near the bottom Law of the wall
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Data from Ponce de Leon Inlet Florida Intracoastal Waterway Florida
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Law of the wall may be widely applicable (Monismith’s Lectures)
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Ralph Obtained from velocity profiles and best fitting them to the values of z 0 and u * (Monismith’s Lectures)
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Shear Production from Reynolds’ stresses Mixing of momentum Mixing of property S Munk & Anderson (1948, J. Mar. Res., 7, 276) Pacanowski & Philander (1981, J. Phys. Oceanogr., 11, 1443)
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With ADCP: and θ is the angle of ADCP’s transducers -- 20º Lohrmann et al. (1990, J. Oc. Atmos. Tech., 7, 19)
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Souza et al. (2004, Geophys. Res. Lett., 31, L20309) (2002)
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Day of the year (2002) Souza et al. (2004, Geophys. Res. Lett., 31, L20309)
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S 1, T 1 S 2, T 2 S 2 > S 1 T 2 > T 1 Buoyancy Production from Cooling and Double Diffusion
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Layering Experiment http://www.phys.ocean.dal.ca/programs/doubdiff/labdemos.html
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From Kelley et al. (2002, The Diffusive Regime of Double-Diffusive Convection) Data from the Arctic
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Layers in Seno Gala
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Dissipation from strain in the flow (m 2 /s 3 ) (Jennifer MacKinnon’s webpage)
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From: Rippeth et al. (2003, JPO, 1889) Production of TKE Dissipation of TKE
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http://praxis.pha.jhu.edu/science/emspec.html Example of Spectrum – Electromagnetic Spectrum
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(Monismith’s Lectures)
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Wave number K (m -1 ) S (m 3 s -2 ) Other ways to determine dissipation (indirectly) Kolmogorov’s K -5/3 law
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(Monismith’s Lectures) P equilibrium range inertial dissipating range Kolmogorov’s K -5/3 law
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(Monismith’s Lectures) Kolmogorov’s K -5/3 law -- one of the most important results of turbulence theory
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Stratification kills turbulence In stratified flow, buoyancy tends to: i) inhibit range of scales in the subinertial range ii) “kill” the turbulence
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(Monismith’s Lectures) U3U3
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(responsible for dissipation of TKE) At intermediate scales --Inertial subrange – transfer of energy by inertial forces
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(Monismith’s Lectures) Other ways to determine dissipation (indirectly)
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