Evidence of double diffusion in the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence

Observation of thermohaline staircases and low-density ratios in the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence (BMC) suggests salt-fingering activity between the high salinity South Atlantic Central Water and low salinity Antarctic Intermediate Water. Vertical salt-finger induced salt fluxes are estimated in the B...

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Language:unknown
Published: 2002
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Online Access:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_09670637_v49_n1_p41_Bianchi
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09670637_v49_n1_p41_Bianchi
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Summary:Observation of thermohaline staircases and low-density ratios in the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence (BMC) suggests salt-fingering activity between the high salinity South Atlantic Central Water and low salinity Antarctic Intermediate Water. Vertical salt-finger induced salt fluxes are estimated in the BMC using a model for fastest growing fingers. Maximum salt-finger fluxes of 39.9 × 10-10 W kg-1 (5.3 × 10-7 m s-1) were estimated, similar to existing estimates in a Mediterranean salt lens embedded within the North Atlantic water. The fluxes normalized by the large-scale property gradients lead to fairly large estimates of diapycnal haline and thermal diffusivities, of up to 0.74 × 10-4 and 0.34 × 10-4 m2s-1, respectively, showing the enhancement of the haline diffusivity due to salt fingers. Estimated diffusive-convection fluxes based on flux laws derived from laboratory experiments are two orders of magnitude larger than salt-finger fluxes. These results suggest that, where cross-front interleaving leads to layering of relatively cold-fresh water over warm-salty water, diffusive upward convection dominates the vertical property fluxes in the frontal region. It appears that on the warm-salty side of the BMC, away from the narrow band dominated by interleaving, salt-finger integrated vertical fluxes nearly balance the cross-front lateral integrated fluxes. The effect of baroclinicity on the vertical property fluxes was evaluated and it was found that, in the BMC, the baroclinicity enhances the interleaving. © 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.