Dynamics of Langmuir circulation in oceanic surface layers
Dynamics of Langmuir circulation in oceanic surface layers
Date
1994-09
Authors
Gnanadesikan, Anand
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DOI
10.1575/1912/5566
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Keywords
Ocean circulation
Oceanic mixing
Acania (Ship) Cruise
Wecoma (Ship) Cruise W
Oceanic mixing
Acania (Ship) Cruise
Wecoma (Ship) Cruise W
Abstract
This work investigates whether large-scale coherent vortex structures driven by
wave-current interaction (Langmuir circulation) are responsible for maintaining
the oceanic mixed layer. Langmuir circulations dominate the near-surface vertical
transport of momentum and density when the characteristic scale for forcing
(defined as the Craik-Leibovich instability parameter γCLS) is stronger than the
characteristic scale for diffusive decay γdiff. Since the wave-current forcing is
concentrated near the surface both terms depend on the cell geometry. Cells with
long wavelengths penetrate more deeply into the water column. These cells grow
more slowly than the fastest growing mode for most cases, but always dominate
the solution in the absence of Coriolis forces. In the presence of Coriolis forces,
the horizontal wavelength and thus the depth of penetration are limited. When a
cell geometry is found such that γCLS » γdiff, the current profile produced by small-scale
diffusion is unstable to Langmuir cells and the cells replace small-scale
diffusion as the dominant vertical transport mechanism for momentum and
density. The perturbation crosscell shear is predicted to scale as γCLS. Such a
scaling is observed during two field experiments. The observed velocity profile
during these experiments is more sheared than predicted by a model which
implicitly assumes instantaneous mixing by large eddies, but less sheared than
predicted by a model which assumes small-scale mixing by near-isotropic
turbulence. The latter profile is unstable to Langmuir cells when waves are
present. The inclusion of cells driven by wave-current interaction explains the
failure of the mixed layer to restratify on two days with high waves and low wind.
Wave-current interaction introduces a small but efficient source of energy for
transporting density which goes as the surface stress times the Stokes drift.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution September 1994
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Citation
Gnanadesikan, A. (1994). Dynamics of Langmuir circulation in oceanic surface layers [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/5566