Turbulent mixing plays an important role in controlling the vertical structure
of temperature, salinity and density in shelf seas. It is crucial in controlling
the seasonal stratification in temperate shelf seas, though our incomplete
knowledge of the processes involved prevents an accurate representation in
numerical shelf sea modelling. This study made use of both observational field
work and numerical turbulence modelling to identify first- and second-order
mixing mechanisms in weakly stratified waters in the Celtic Sea, U.K.
Field work was conducted both in spring (May, 2012) and summer (August,
2012). During the 11-day field work in spring, an overall warming of the
well-mixed water column (0.7°C) was observed at a rate consistent with
seasonal solar heat input at the sea surface. This was well-represented in
numerical simulations for the same period, conducted using the two-equation
k-epsilon statistical turbulence closure model implemented in the General Ocean
Turbulence Model (GOTM). Comparative observations conducted over a 12-
day period in summer (August, 2012) identified significant advective control
with warming (1.7°C) substantially outpacing the calculated solar heat input
(0.5°C). Field work in summer presented vertical thermal gradients as a result
of the seasonal stratification (Ttop-Tbot = 2.5°C). The largest variability in
stratification occurred over the neap-spring cycle; a breakdown in thermal
stratification occurred during the transition to spring tides although the timing
was controlled by strong surface forcing conditions which increased surface
mixing and also advected well-mixed waters over the study site.
The passage of non-linear internal waves were observed along the seasonal
thermocline during slack water, increasing shear and reducing the dynamic
stability of the water column. These were likely to be generated by hydraulic
control and released during the transition from sub-critical to super-critical flow in the form of lee waves. Two packets of non-linear internal waves with
a vertical displacement of the leading wave of 11 m and a period between
successive troughs of approximately 23–36 minutes were recorded.
Microstructure profiles of derived turbulent dissipation sampled over 12.4
hour tidal cycles were conducted at both neap and spring tides in spring and
summer. Results show bottom boundary layer mixing to be the primary control
on the water column structure with a dominant M2 tidal periodicity. The phase
lag and tidal asymmetry observed was well reproduced by the 2-equation
turbulence model. Phase lags were observed to increase with height above
the bed with neap tides generating a larger phase lag at the top of the bottom
boundary layer than at spring tides. The impact of a stratified water column
was observed in the maximum height attained by the bottom boundary layer in
summer although there was no observable increase in the phase lag in contrast
to that reported in the literature. A lack of an internally stratified water
column in the GOTM model meant that it did not reproduce the stratification
effects on the growth of the bottom boundary layer. Turbulent dissipation
levels in the numerical simulations also diverged from that observed in the
interior supporting the notion of missing mixing mechanisms providing an
additional source of turbulence to the shelf sea interior. The lack of interior
mixing let to an over estimation in the strength of the thermocline in GOTM
in comparison to the in-situ observations.
The findings of this study concludes that in weakly stratified shelf seas typical
of the conditions presented at this study site, the primary mechanism controlling
the vertical structure of the water column is the strength of the tidal
mixing that varies significantly over the spring-neap cycle. Increased surface
forcing from strong wind events potentially can tip the balance between a
stratified and well-mixed water column through increased vertical mixing in
the surface layer near the thermocline and by generating enhanced horizontal
advection as well as baroclinic instabilities. This study reaffirms the necessity
for shelf sea numerical models to correctly parametrise interior mixing under
stratified conditions since the lack of mixing led to an over estimation in the
strength of the thermocline. One candidate mechanism identified in this study
with the potential to enhance interior mixing were non-linear internal lee
waves generated by the topography in the vicinity of the study site.
Date of Award | 2019 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Philip Hosegood (Director of Studies (First Supervisor)), Jill Schwartz (Other Supervisor) & Ricardo Torres Almaza (Other Supervisor) |
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- Turbulence
- Shelf sea
- Oceanography
- Front
- Mixing
The Sensitivity of Marginally Stratified Shelf Sea Fronts to Turbulent Mixing Processes
Zanacchi, M. (Author). 2019
Student thesis: PhD