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Modeling study of turbulent mixing over the continential shelf : comparison of turbulent closure schemes

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Title Modeling study of turbulent mixing over the continential shelf : comparison of turbulent closure schemes
Names Wijesekera, H. W. (creator)
Allen, John S. (creator)
Newberger, P. A. (creator)
Date Issued 2003 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract The sensitivity of model-produced time-dependent wind-driven circulation on the
continental shelf to the turbulent closure scheme employed is studied with a twodimensional
approximation (variations across-shelf and in depth) using the Princeton
Ocean Model. The level 2.5 Mellor-Yamada closure (MY), k-ε closure, and K-Profile
Parameterization schemes are used to evaluate the mesoscale fields and the spatial and
temporal variability of mixing. All three submodels produce similar features in the
mesoscale circulation. They produce qualitatively similar eddy diffusivities and eddy
viscosities, although the turbulent structure and the mixing intensities can differ
quantitatively. The k-ε length scale follows the buoyancy length scale when stratification
is important. In contrast, the length scale produced by the q²l equation in the MY
scheme deviates substantially from the buoyancy scale unless a stratification-dependent
limitation is imposed. During upwelling-favorable winds, the majority of turbulent mixing
occurs in the top and the bottom boundary layers and in the vicinity of the vertically and
horizontally sheared coastal jet. Turbulent mixing in the coastal jet is primarily driven
by shear-production. The near-surface flow on the inner shelf becomes convectively
unstable as wind stress forces the upwelled water to flow offshore in the surface layer.
During downwelling-favorable winds, the strongest mixing occurs in the vicinity of the
downwelling front. The largest turbulent kinetic energy and dissipation are found near the
bottom of the front. Turbulence in the bottom boundary layer offshore of the front is
concentrated between recirculation cells which are generated as a result of symmetric
instabilities in the boundary layer flow.
Genre Article
Topic numerical modeling
Identifier Allen, J. S., Newberger P. A., and Wijesekera, H. W., (2003). Modeling study of turbulent mixing over the continental shelf : comparison of turbulent closure schemes, J. Geophys. Res., 108, C3, 3103.

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