Diapycnal mixing and the internal wave field north of the Kerguelen Plateau

Dissipating internal waves are the main source of mixing in the stratified ocean. Recent observational and modelling studies in the Southern Ocean primarily associate the generation of internal waves with either wind forcing or with rough topography. This work explores the nature of mixing and its s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Meyer, Amelie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.utas.edu.au/18702/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/18702/1/whole-Meyer-thesis.pdf
Description
Summary:Dissipating internal waves are the main source of mixing in the stratified ocean. Recent observational and modelling studies in the Southern Ocean primarily associate the generation of internal waves with either wind forcing or with rough topography. This work explores the nature of mixing and its sources north of the Kerguelen Plateau, a large topographic feature in the Southern Ocean. Based on novel observations, we present the distribution and intensity of mixing, and the internal wave field properties. This thesis includes (i) a regional description of the Kerguelen Plateau oceanographic characteristics; (ii) estimates of mixing and its sources; and (iii) a study of the internal wave field in the vicinity of the Plateau. The data consist of 914 temperature, salinity, pressure and horizontal velocity profiles from Electromagnetic Autonomous Profling Explorer (EM-APEX) floats deployed northeast of the Kerguelen Plateau in 2008. We are able to estimate diapycnal mixing in the upper 1600m of the water column. To estimate mixing, we apply both a Thorpe-scale analysis on density inversions and a shear-strain parameterization method and compare the estimates with direct microstructure measurements. The observational results provide the first clear connection between the distribution and intensity of mixing, and the associated internal wave field properties. In the Kerguelen Plateau area, mean mixing from the EM-APEX data is slightly larger (diffusivity of O(10-5m2s-1) than typical open-ocean background levels. Mixing intensities show strong spatial and temporal variability reaching considerably large values close to the Plateau (di�usivity of O(10