Convection Enhances Mixing in the Southern Ocean
Date
2018
Authors
Sohail, Taimoor
Gayen, Bishakhdatta
Hogg, Andy
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American Geophysical Union
Abstract
Mixing efficiency is a measure of the energy lost to mixing compared to that lost to viscous
dissipation. In a turbulent stratified fluid the mixing efficiency is often assumed constant at 𝜂 = 0.2, whereas
with convection it takes values closer to 1. The value of mixing efficiency when both stratified shear flow
and buoyancy-driven convection are active remains uncertain. We use a series of numerical simulations
to determine the mixing efficiency in an idealized Southern Ocean model. The model is energetically
closed and fully resolves convection and turbulence such that mixing efficiency can be diagnosed.
Mixing efficiency decreases with increasing wind stress but is enhanced by turbulent convection and by
large thermal gradients in regions with a strongly stratified thermocline. Using scaling theory and the model
results, we predict an overall mixing efficiency for the Southern Ocean that is significantly greater than 0.2
while emphasizing that mixing efficiency is not constant.
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Geophysical Research Letters
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Journal article
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Open Access
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