Over−reflection of horizontally propagating gravity waves by a vertical shear layer

1978 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 1908 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Mollo-Christensen
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-74
Author(s):  
Mark Schlutow ◽  
Georg S. Voelker

Abstract We investigate strongly nonlinear stationary gravity waves which experience refraction due to a thin vertical shear layer of horizontal background wind. The velocity amplitude of the waves is of the same order of magnitude as the background flow and hence the self-induced mean flow alters the modulation properties to leading order. In this theoretical study, we show that the stability of such a refracted wave depends on the classical modulation stability criterion for each individual layer, above and below the shearing. Additionally, the stability is conditioned by novel instability criteria providing bounds on the mean-flow horizontal wind and the amplitude of the wave. A necessary condition for instability is that the mean-flow horizontal wind in the upper layer is stronger than the wind in the lower layer.


2013 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 382-401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julien Jouanno ◽  
Frédéric Marin ◽  
Yves du Penhoat ◽  
Jean-Marc Molines

Abstract A regional numerical model of the tropical Atlantic Ocean and observations are analyzed to investigate the intraseasonal fluctuations of the sea surface temperature at the equator in the Gulf of Guinea. Results indicate that the seasonal cooling in this region is significantly shaped by short-duration cooling events caused by wind-forced equatorial waves: mixed Rossby–gravity waves within the 12–20-day period band, inertia–gravity waves with periods below 11 days, and equatorially trapped Kelvin waves with periods between 25 and 40 days. In these different ranges of frequencies, it is shown that the wave-induced horizontal oscillations of the northern front of the mean cold tongue dominate the variations of mixed layer temperature near the equator. But the model mixed layer heat budget also shows that the equatorial waves make a significant contribution to the mixed layer heat budget through modulation of the turbulent cooling, especially above the core of the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC). The turbulent cooling variability is found to be mainly controlled by the intraseasonal modulation of the vertical shear in the upper ocean. This mechanism is maximum during periods of seasonal cooling, especially in boreal summer, when the surface South Equatorial Current is strongest and between 2°S and the equator, where the presence of the EUC provides a background vertical shear in the upper ocean. It applies for the three types of intraseasonal waves. Inertia–gravity waves also modulate the turbulent heat flux at the equator through vertical displacement of the core of the EUC in response to equatorial divergence and convergence.


2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (5) ◽  
pp. 1509-1529 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolaos A. Bakas ◽  
Petros J. Ioannou

Abstract In this paper, the emission of internal gravity waves from a local westerly shear layer is studied. Thermal and/or vorticity forcing of the shear layer with a wide range of frequencies and scales can lead to strong emission of gravity waves in the region exterior to the shear layer. The shear flow not only passively filters and refracts the emitted wave spectrum, but also actively participates in the gravity wave emission in conjunction with the distributed forcing. This interaction leads to enhanced radiated momentum fluxes but more importantly to enhanced gravity wave energy fluxes. This enhanced emission power can be traced to the nonnormal growth of the perturbations in the shear region, that is, to the transfer of the kinetic energy of the mean shear flow to the emitted gravity waves. The emitted wave energy flux increases with shear and can become as large as 30 times greater than the corresponding flux emitted in the absence of a localized shear region. Waves that have horizontal wavelengths larger than the depth of the shear layer radiate easterly momentum away, whereas the shorter waves are trapped in the shear region and deposit their momentum at their critical levels. The observed spectrum, as well as the physical mechanisms influencing the spectrum such as wave interference and Doppler shifting effects, is discussed. While for large Richardson numbers there is equipartition of momentum among a wide range of frequencies, most of the energy is found to be carried by waves having vertical wavelengths in a narrow band around the value of twice the depth of the region. It is shown that the waves that are emitted from the shear region have vertical wavelengths of the size of the shear region.


2014 ◽  
Vol 755 ◽  
pp. 397-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Wang ◽  
James C. McWilliams ◽  
Claire Ménesguen

AbstractThe linear instability of several rotating, stably stratified, interior vertical shear flows $\def \xmlpi #1{}\def \mathsfbi #1{\boldsymbol {\mathsf {#1}}}\let \le =\leqslant \let \leq =\leqslant \let \ge =\geqslant \let \geq =\geqslant \def \Pr {\mathit {Pr}}\def \Fr {\mathit {Fr}}\def \Rey {\mathit {Re}}\overline{U}(z)$ is calculated in Boussinesq equations. Two types of baroclinic, ageostrophic instability, AI1 and AI2, are found in odd-symmetric $\overline{U}(z)$ for intermediate Rossby number ($\mathit{Ro}$). AI1 has zero frequency; it appears in a continuous transformation of the unstable mode properties between classic baroclinic instability (BCI) and centrifugal instability (CI). It begins to occur at intermediate $\mathit{Ro}$ values and horizontal wavenumbers ($k,l$) that are far from $l= 0$ or $k = 0$, where the growth rate of BCI or CI is the strongest. AI1 grows by drawing kinetic energy from the mean flow, and the perturbation converts kinetic energy to potential energy. The instability AI2 has inertia critical layers (ICL); hence it is associated with inertia-gravity waves. For an unstable AI2 mode, the coupling is either between an interior balanced shear wave and an inertia-gravity wave (BG), or between two inertia-gravity waves (GG). The main energy source for an unstable BG mode is the mean kinetic energy, while the main energy source for an unstable GG mode is the mean available potential energy. AI1 and BG type AI2 occur in the neighbourhood of $A-S= 0$ (a sign change in the difference between absolute vertical vorticity and horizontal strain rate in isentropic coordinates; see McWilliams et al., Phys. Fluids, vol. 10, 1998, pp. 3178–3184), while GG type AI2 arises beyond this condition. Both AI1 and AI2 are unbalanced instabilities; they serve as an initiation of a possible local route for the loss of balance in 3D interior flows, leading to an efficient energy transfer to small scales.


2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 1059-1065 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. R. Clemesha ◽  
P. P. Batista ◽  
R. A. Buriti da Costa ◽  
N. Schuch

Abstract. Using the variance in meteor radar winds as a measure of gravity wave activity, we investigate the temporal variations in gravity waves at three locations in Brazil: São João do Cariri (7.3° S, 36.4° W), Cachoeira Paulista (22.7° S, 45.0° W) and Santa Maria (29.7° S, 53.7° W). The technique used is that of Hocking (2005) which makes it possible to separate the zonal and meridional components of the fluctuating wind velocity. We find that the seasonal variation of the fluctuating wind is similar to that of the amplitude of the diurnal tide, showing a predominantly semi-annual variation, stronger at Cachoeira Paulista and Santa Maria than at the quasi-equatorial station, Cariri. Both with respect to the seasonal trend and shorter term variations, strong coupling between gravity wave activity and tides is indicated by a remarkably close correlation between the fluctuating velocity and the vertical shear in the tidal winds. It is not clear as to whether this is caused by gravity wave forcing of the tides or whether it results from in situ generation of gravity waves by tidal wind shear.


1971 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. S. Janowitz

We consider the two-dimensional flow produced by the slow horizontal motion of a vertical plate of height 2b through a vertically stratified (ρ = ρ0(1 - βz)) non-diffusive viscous fluid. Our results are valid when U2 [Lt ] Ub/ν [Lt ] 1, where U is the speed of the plate and ν the kinematic viscosity of the fluid. Upstream of the body we find a blocking column of length 10−2b4/(Uν/βg. This column is composed of cells of closed streamlines. The convergence of these cells near the tips of the plate leads to alternate jets. The plate itself is embedded in a vertical shear layer of thickness (Uν/βg)1/3. In the upstream portion of this layer the vertical velocities are of order U and in the downstream portion of order Ub/(Uν/βg)1/3 ([Gt ] U). The flow is uniform and undisturbed downstream of this layer.


1982 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
pp. 505-521 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cornelis A. Van Duin ◽  
Hennie Kelder

The properties of reflection and transmission of internal gravity waves incident upon a shear layer containing a critical level are investigated. The shear layer is modelled by a hyperbolic tangent profile. In the Boussinesq approximation, the differential equation governing the propagation of these waves can then be transformed into Heun's equation. For large Richardson numbers this equation can be approximated by an equation that has solutions in terms of hypergeometric functions. For these values of the Richardson number the reflection coefficient proves to be strongly dependent on the place of the critical level in the shear flow. If the Doppler-shifted frequency is an odd function of the height difference with respect to the critical level, the reflection and transmission coefficients can be evaluated in closed form.Over-reflection is possible for sufficiently small wavenumbers and Richardson numbers. It is pointed out that over-reflection and over-transmission cannot occur in a stable flow and that resonant over-reflection is not possible in our model.


2010 ◽  
Vol 664 ◽  
pp. 478-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
VICTOR I. SHRIRA ◽  
WILLIAM A. TOWNSEND

The paper is concerned with analytical study of inertia-gravity waves in rotating density-stratified ideal fluid confined in a spherical shell. It primarily aims at clarifying the possible role of these motions in deep ocean mixing. Recently, it was found that on the ‘non-traditional’ β-plane inertia-gravity internal waves can propagate polewards beyond their inertial latitude, where the wave frequency equals the local Coriolis parameter, by turning into subinertial modes trapped in the narrowing waveguides around the local minima of buoyancy frequency N. The behaviour of characteristics was established: wave horizontal and vertical scales decrease as the wave advances polewards and tend to zero at a latitude corresponding to an attractor of characteristics. However, the basic questions about wave evolution, its quantitative description and the possibility of its reflection from the critical latitude remain open. The present work addresses these issues by studying the linear inviscid evolution of finite bandwidth wavepackets on the ‘non-traditional’ β-plane past the inertial latitude for generic oceanic stratification. Beyond the inertial latitude, the wave field is confined in narrowing waveguides of three distinct generic types around different local minima of the buoyancy frequency. In the oceanic context, the widest is adjacent to the flat bottom, the thinnest is the upper mixed layer, and the middle one is located between the seasonal and main thermocline. We find explicit asymptotic solutions describing the wave field in the WKB approximation. As a byproduct, the conservation of wave action principle is explicitly formulated for all types of internal waves on the ‘non-traditional’ β-plane. The wave velocities and vertical shear tend to infinity and become singular at the attractor latitude or its vicinity for both monochromatic and finite bandwidth packets. We call this phenomenon singular focusing. These WKB solutions are shown to remain valid up to singularity for the bottom and mid-ocean waveguides. The main conclusion is that even in the inviscid setting the wave evolution towards smaller and smaller horizontal and vertical scales is irreversible: there is no reflection. For situations typical of deep ocean, a simultaneous increase in wave amplitude and decrease of vertical scale causes a sharp increase of vertical shear, which may lead to wave breaking and increased mixing.


2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (12) ◽  
pp. 4417-4431 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Snyder ◽  
David J. Muraki ◽  
Riwal Plougonven ◽  
Fuqing Zhang

Abstract Vortex dipoles provide a simple representation of localized atmospheric jets. Numerical simulations of a synoptic-scale dipole in surface potential temperature are considered in a rotating, stratified fluid with approximately uniform potential vorticity. Following an initial period of adjustment, the dipole propagates along a slightly curved trajectory at a nearly steady rate and with a nearly fixed structure for more than 50 days. Downstream from the jet maximum, the flow also contains smaller-scale, upward-propagating inertia–gravity waves that are embedded within and stationary relative to the dipole. The waves form elongated bows along the leading edge of the dipole. Consistent with propagation in horizontal deformation and vertical shear, the waves’ horizontal scale shrinks and the vertical slope varies as they approach the leading stagnation point in the dipole’s flow. Because the waves persist for tens of days despite explicit dissipation in the numerical model that would otherwise damp the waves on a time scale of a few hours, they must be inherent features of the dipole itself, rather than remnants of imbalances in the initial conditions. The wave amplitude varies with the strength of the dipole, with waves becoming obvious once the maximum vertical vorticity in the dipole is roughly half the Coriolis parameter. Possible mechanisms for the wave generation are spontaneous wave emission and the instability of the underlying balanced dipole.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document