Large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in Labrador Sea deep mixed layers

Understanding the dynamics of deep convection leading to the formation of deep water is important not only for studying the small-scale generation regions, but also for studying the large-scale thermohaline circulation Large Eddy Simulation (LES) is used to model deep convection with an imposed mean...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kruse, Denise M.
Other Authors: Guest, Peter, Harcourt, Ramsey
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10945/7731
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spelling ftnavalpschool:oai:calhoun.nps.edu:10945/7731 2024-06-09T07:47:31+00:00 Large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in Labrador Sea deep mixed layers Kruse, Denise M. Guest, Peter Harcourt, Ramsey 2000-06-01 viii, 93 p.;28 cm. application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10945/7731 en_US eng Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School ocn640945879 https://hdl.handle.net/10945/7731 Thesis 2000 ftnavalpschool 2024-05-15T00:35:02Z Understanding the dynamics of deep convection leading to the formation of deep water is important not only for studying the small-scale generation regions, but also for studying the large-scale thermohaline circulation Large Eddy Simulation (LES) is used to model deep convection with an imposed mean horizontal density gradient of two different strengths and wind forcing from various directions, with strong surface cooling representative of the Labrador Sea. Results from these different cases are compared and analyzed to understand the effects of horizontal density gradients and wind direction on turbulence statistics for deep convection. Both the strength of horizontal density gradients and wind direction relative to the gradient affect mixed layer scalar variances, turbulent vertical fluxes, Vertical Turbulent Kinetic Energy (VTKE), and stability during deep convection. Wind direction dominates over gradient strength in determining vertical flux magnitude with larger variation in strong gradient cases. Levels of VTKE are more dependent on gradient strength, with weaker gradients producing higher values of VTKF than stronger gradients regardless of wind direction. Wind direction does alter VTKE levels in the same manner as it alters vertical flux levels. The presence of a horizontal gradient is a stabilizing factor in areas of strong surface cooling U.S. Navy (U.S.N.) author. http://archive.org/details/largeeddysimulat109457731 Thesis Labrador Sea Naval Postgraduate School: Calhoun
institution Open Polar
collection Naval Postgraduate School: Calhoun
op_collection_id ftnavalpschool
language English
description Understanding the dynamics of deep convection leading to the formation of deep water is important not only for studying the small-scale generation regions, but also for studying the large-scale thermohaline circulation Large Eddy Simulation (LES) is used to model deep convection with an imposed mean horizontal density gradient of two different strengths and wind forcing from various directions, with strong surface cooling representative of the Labrador Sea. Results from these different cases are compared and analyzed to understand the effects of horizontal density gradients and wind direction on turbulence statistics for deep convection. Both the strength of horizontal density gradients and wind direction relative to the gradient affect mixed layer scalar variances, turbulent vertical fluxes, Vertical Turbulent Kinetic Energy (VTKE), and stability during deep convection. Wind direction dominates over gradient strength in determining vertical flux magnitude with larger variation in strong gradient cases. Levels of VTKE are more dependent on gradient strength, with weaker gradients producing higher values of VTKF than stronger gradients regardless of wind direction. Wind direction does alter VTKE levels in the same manner as it alters vertical flux levels. The presence of a horizontal gradient is a stabilizing factor in areas of strong surface cooling U.S. Navy (U.S.N.) author. http://archive.org/details/largeeddysimulat109457731
author2 Guest, Peter
Harcourt, Ramsey
format Thesis
author Kruse, Denise M.
spellingShingle Kruse, Denise M.
Large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in Labrador Sea deep mixed layers
author_facet Kruse, Denise M.
author_sort Kruse, Denise M.
title Large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in Labrador Sea deep mixed layers
title_short Large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in Labrador Sea deep mixed layers
title_full Large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in Labrador Sea deep mixed layers
title_fullStr Large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in Labrador Sea deep mixed layers
title_full_unstemmed Large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in Labrador Sea deep mixed layers
title_sort large eddy simulation of interactions between free convection, wind driven currents, and baroclinicity in labrador sea deep mixed layers
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2000
url https://hdl.handle.net/10945/7731
genre Labrador Sea
genre_facet Labrador Sea
op_relation ocn640945879
https://hdl.handle.net/10945/7731
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