11:15 〜 11:30
[AOS11-09] Near-inertial wave modulated turbulence in a Kuroshio anticyclonic eddy east of Japan
キーワード:Turbulence, Near-inertial waves, Mixing, Mesoscale eddy, Profiling float, Kuroshio
Storm-generated near-inertial waves are a significant source for deep-ocean mixing. However, their energy pathways beyond wind generation and equatorward propagation as low modes are still elusive. Previous studies suggest that the bulk of inertial wind power is lost in the nearfield of storm forcing, but there is little observational evidence to confirm this.
Finescale horizontal velocity, temperature, salinity and microscale temperature profiles to 500-m depth were collected in the Kuroshio-Oyashio Confluence east of Japan during the storm-seasons of 2016 and 2017 with -augmented EM-APEX floats. Temporal sampling was at 1-h resolution during storms, sufficient to resolve near-inertial motions. Turbulent dissipation rates and diapycnal diffusivities K were inferred from microscale temperature-gradient spectra. Several floats were trapped near the velocity maximum of anticyclonic eddies. Mesoscale eddies are known to trap and amplify near-inertial waves and to modulate near-inertial wave distribution and dissipation.
Near-inertial energy-fluxes within the eddy are mostly inward and downward. Signatures of a critical layer, e.g., increasing vertical wavenumbers, shear, and turbulence are present at the depth where the eddy vorticity approaches the surface value, and strong vertical mean shears and vorticity-gradients occur. Turbulence is reduced by a factor of 10 above 180-m depth, despite elevated near-inertial energy, and enhanced between 200 and 255 m. Three mechanisms for the generation of enhanced turbulence are hypothesized: i) local and remotely forced near-inertial waves superimposing to create shear-unstable layers, ii) kinematic superposition of eddy and near-inertial shear that generates patches of turbulence at inertial periods, iii) a near-inertial critical layer due to dynamic wave/mean interaction. Ray tracing simulations will be performed to examine whether vertical vorticity gradients and/or Doppler shifting are responsible for the presence of a critical layer.
Finescale horizontal velocity, temperature, salinity and microscale temperature profiles to 500-m depth were collected in the Kuroshio-Oyashio Confluence east of Japan during the storm-seasons of 2016 and 2017 with -augmented EM-APEX floats. Temporal sampling was at 1-h resolution during storms, sufficient to resolve near-inertial motions. Turbulent dissipation rates and diapycnal diffusivities K were inferred from microscale temperature-gradient spectra. Several floats were trapped near the velocity maximum of anticyclonic eddies. Mesoscale eddies are known to trap and amplify near-inertial waves and to modulate near-inertial wave distribution and dissipation.
Near-inertial energy-fluxes within the eddy are mostly inward and downward. Signatures of a critical layer, e.g., increasing vertical wavenumbers, shear, and turbulence are present at the depth where the eddy vorticity approaches the surface value, and strong vertical mean shears and vorticity-gradients occur. Turbulence is reduced by a factor of 10 above 180-m depth, despite elevated near-inertial energy, and enhanced between 200 and 255 m. Three mechanisms for the generation of enhanced turbulence are hypothesized: i) local and remotely forced near-inertial waves superimposing to create shear-unstable layers, ii) kinematic superposition of eddy and near-inertial shear that generates patches of turbulence at inertial periods, iii) a near-inertial critical layer due to dynamic wave/mean interaction. Ray tracing simulations will be performed to examine whether vertical vorticity gradients and/or Doppler shifting are responsible for the presence of a critical layer.