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Publications (Foto: J.-R. Lippels / Hereon)

Following publication has been announced by our department Small-Scale Physics and Turbulence. For further information please contact Dr Jeffrey Carpenter, co-author of the publication:

 

Scheifele, B., Waterman, S., & Carpenter, J. R. (2021): Turbulence and Mixing in the Arctic Ocean’s Amundsen Gulf. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 51(1), 169-186, doi:10.1175/JPO-D-20-0057.1

Abstract:

This study uses CTD and microstructure measurements of shear and temperature from 348 glider profiles to characterize turbulence and turbulent mixing in the southeastern Beaufort Sea, where turbulence observations are presently scarce. We find that turbulence is typically weak: the turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate ε has a median value (with 95% confidence intervals in parentheses) of 2.3 [2.2, 2.4] × 10−11 W kg−1 and is less than 1.0 × 10−10 W kg−1 in 68% of observations. Variability in ε spans five orders of magnitude, with indications that turbulence is bottom enhanced and modulated in time by the semidiurnal tide. Stratification is strong and frequently damps turbulence, inhibiting diapycnal mixing. Buoyancy Reynolds number estimates suggest that turbulent diapycnal mixing is unlikely in 93% of observations; however, a small number of strongly turbulent mixing events are disproportionately important in determining net buoyancy fluxes. The arithmetic mean diapycnal diffusivity of density is 4.5 [2.3, 14] × 10−6 m2 s−1, three orders of magnitude larger than that expected from molecular diffusion. Vertical heat fluxes are modest at O(0.1) W m−2, of the same order of magnitude as those in the Canada Basin double-diffusive staircase, however, staircases are generally not observed. Despite significant heat present in the Pacific Water layer in the form of a warm-core mesoscale eddy and smaller, O(1) km, temperature anomalies, turbulent mixing was found to be too low to release this heat to shallower depths.

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