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Turbulence in a Sheared, Salt-Fingering-Favorable Environment: Anisotropy and Effective Diffusivities

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Field Value
Title Turbulence in a Sheared, Salt-Fingering-Favorable Environment: Anisotropy and Effective Diffusivities
Names Kimura, Satoshi (creator)
Smyth, William (creator)
Kunze, Eric (creator)
Date Issued 2011-06 (iso8601)
Abstract Direct numerical simulations (DNS) of a shear layer with salt-fingering-favorable stratification have been
performed for different Richardson numbers Ri and density ratios R[subscript]p. In the absence of shear (Ri = oo), the
primary instability is square planform salt fingering, alternating cells of rising and sinking fluid. In the presence
of shear, salt fingering takes the form of salt sheets, planar regions of rising and sinking fluid, aligned
parallel to the sheared flow. After the onset of secondary instability, the flow becomes turbulent. The continued
influence of the primary instability distorts the late-stage structure and hence biases isotropic estimates
of the turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate . In contrast, thermal and saline gradients evolve to become
more isotropic than velocity gradients at their dissipation scales. Thus, the standard observational methodology
of estimating the turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate from vertical profiles of microscale gradients
and assuming isotropy can underestimate its true value by a factor of 2–3, whereas estimates of thermal and
saline dissipation rates using this approach are relatively accurate. Likewise, estimates of G from vertical
profiles overestimate the true G by roughly a factor of 2. Salt sheets are ineffective at transporting momentum.
Thermal and saline effective diffusivities decrease with decreasing Ri, despite the added energy source
provided by background shear. After the transition to turbulence, the thermal to saline flux ratio and the
effective Schmidt number remain close to the values predicted by linear theory.
Genre Article
Identifier Kimura, Satoshi, William Smyth, Eric Kunze, 2011: Turbulence in a Sheared, Salt-Fingering-Favorable Environment: Anisotropy and Effective Diffusivities. J. Phys. Oceanogr., 41, 1144–1159.

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