A study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves

Although turbulence near the ocean surface is of great significance to the air-sea exchange of heat, gas and momentum it is a poorly understood phenomenon especially at high wind speeds when vertical transfer processes tend to be greatest. This work evaluates ocean surface turbulence at high sea sta...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gemmrich, Johannes Richard
Other Authors: Farmer, David M.
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9854
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-98542018-08-03T17:17:58Z A study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves Gemmrich, Johannes Richard Farmer, David M. Ocean waves Turbulence Ocean temperature Although turbulence near the ocean surface is of great significance to the air-sea exchange of heat, gas and momentum it is a poorly understood phenomenon especially at high wind speeds when vertical transfer processes tend to be greatest. This work evaluates ocean surface turbulence at high sea states by exploiting heat as a naturally occurring passive tracer. To this end, a freely drifting instrument with a mechanically driven temperature profiler, fixed depth thermistors and conductivity cells was used to monitor the fine scale temperature structure and breaking wave activity. These open ocean measurements form the basis for a comprehensive account of the near surface turbulence field. Temperature profiles reveal a rich fine structure which, when combined with independent air-sea heat flux measurements reveal the presence of a surface layer of wave enhanced turbulence, modulated by subsurface advection associated with Langmuir circulation. The concept of wave enhanced turbulence, previously based on observations in fetch limited environments, is here extended to open ocean storm conditions. Generation of turbulence depends on the scale and frequency of breaking events. Our observations, which span a wide range of conditions from a coastal strait to the open ocean, show that wind speed or wave age are inadequate predictors of the occurrence frequency of wave breaking, motivating a scaling based on energy input. The decay of turbulence following wave breaking proceeds more rapidly than for isotropic turbulence, permitting generation of a thermal boundary layer a few centimetres thick, which accounts for brief temperature fluctuations observed beneath breaking waves. Advection due to Langmuir circulation also leaves its signature on the near surface temperature field. Both advection and enhanced diffusion are reconciled in a two-dimensional model of the upper ocean boundary layer, providing a framework for studying Langmuir circulation and upper ocean turbulence in terms of the measured temperature structure. The depth integrated dissipation derived from a model analysis of the data closely matches the energy input into the wave field, identifying breaking waves as the major source of turbulent kinetic energy. Graduate 2018-08-02T19:38:24Z 2018-08-02T19:38:24Z 1997 2018-08-02 Thesis https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9854 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Ocean waves
Turbulence
Ocean temperature
spellingShingle Ocean waves
Turbulence
Ocean temperature
Gemmrich, Johannes Richard
A study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves
description Although turbulence near the ocean surface is of great significance to the air-sea exchange of heat, gas and momentum it is a poorly understood phenomenon especially at high wind speeds when vertical transfer processes tend to be greatest. This work evaluates ocean surface turbulence at high sea states by exploiting heat as a naturally occurring passive tracer. To this end, a freely drifting instrument with a mechanically driven temperature profiler, fixed depth thermistors and conductivity cells was used to monitor the fine scale temperature structure and breaking wave activity. These open ocean measurements form the basis for a comprehensive account of the near surface turbulence field. Temperature profiles reveal a rich fine structure which, when combined with independent air-sea heat flux measurements reveal the presence of a surface layer of wave enhanced turbulence, modulated by subsurface advection associated with Langmuir circulation. The concept of wave enhanced turbulence, previously based on observations in fetch limited environments, is here extended to open ocean storm conditions. Generation of turbulence depends on the scale and frequency of breaking events. Our observations, which span a wide range of conditions from a coastal strait to the open ocean, show that wind speed or wave age are inadequate predictors of the occurrence frequency of wave breaking, motivating a scaling based on energy input. The decay of turbulence following wave breaking proceeds more rapidly than for isotropic turbulence, permitting generation of a thermal boundary layer a few centimetres thick, which accounts for brief temperature fluctuations observed beneath breaking waves. Advection due to Langmuir circulation also leaves its signature on the near surface temperature field. Both advection and enhanced diffusion are reconciled in a two-dimensional model of the upper ocean boundary layer, providing a framework for studying Langmuir circulation and upper ocean turbulence in terms of the measured temperature structure. The depth integrated dissipation derived from a model analysis of the data closely matches the energy input into the wave field, identifying breaking waves as the major source of turbulent kinetic energy. === Graduate
author2 Farmer, David M.
author_facet Farmer, David M.
Gemmrich, Johannes Richard
author Gemmrich, Johannes Richard
author_sort Gemmrich, Johannes Richard
title A study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves
title_short A study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves
title_full A study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves
title_fullStr A study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves
title_full_unstemmed A study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves
title_sort study of turbulence and fine scale temperature variability of the ocean thermal boundary layer under breaking surface waves
publishDate 2018
url https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9854
work_keys_str_mv AT gemmrichjohannesrichard astudyofturbulenceandfinescaletemperaturevariabilityoftheoceanthermalboundarylayerunderbreakingsurfacewaves
AT gemmrichjohannesrichard studyofturbulenceandfinescaletemperaturevariabilityoftheoceanthermalboundarylayerunderbreakingsurfacewaves
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