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Models of energy loss from internal waves breaking in the ocean
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2017
Abstract
The supply of energy to the internal wave field in the ocean is, in total, sufficient to support the mixing required to maintain the stratification of the ocean, but can the required rates of turbulent dissipation in mid-water be sustained by breaking internal waves? It is assumed that turbulence occurs in regions where the field of motion can be represented by an exact solution of the equations that describe waves propagating through a uniformly stratified fluid and becoming unstable. Two instabilities leading to wave breaking are examined, convective instability and shear-induced Kelvin–Helmholtz instability. Models are constrained by data representative of the mid-water ocean. Calculations of turbulent dissipation are first made on the assumption that all the waves representing local breaking have the same steepness, $s$, and frequency,
$\unicode[STIX]{x1D70E}$. For some ranges of
$s$ and
$\unicode[STIX]{x1D70E}$, breaking can support the required transfer of energy to turbulence. For convective instability this proves possible for sufficiently large
$s$, typically exceeding 2.0, over a range of
$\unicode[STIX]{x1D70E}$, while for shear-induced instability near-inertial waves are required. Relaxation of the constraint that the model waves all have the same
$s$ and
$\unicode[STIX]{x1D70E}$ requires new assumptions about the nature and consequences of wave breaking. Examples predict an overall dissipation consistent with the observed rates. Further observations are, however, required to test the validity of the assumptions made in the models and, in particular, to determine the nature and frequency of internal wave breaking in the mid-water ocean.
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