Author:
WONG A. B. D.,GRIFFITHS R. W.,HUGHES G. O.
Abstract
A turbulent plume from a continuous source of buoyancy in a long tank is shown to
generate a series of quasi-steady counterflowing horizontal shear layers throughout
the tank. Both the horizontal flow velocity and the depth of the shear layers are
observed to decrease with distance above/below the plume outflow. The shear layers
are supported by the stable density stratification produced by the plume and are
superimposed on the vertical advection and entrainment inflow that make up the
so-called ‘filling box’ circulation. Thus, at some depths, the surrounding water flows
away from the plume instead of being entrained, although we see no evidence of
‘detrainment’ of dense plume water. Given the stratification produced by the plume
at large times, the timescale for the velocity structure to adjust to changes in forcing
is proportional to the time for long internal gravity waves to travel the length of the
tank. The shear layers are interpreted in terms of internal normal modes that are
excited by, and which in turn determine, the horizontal plume outflow. The sixth and
seventh baroclinic modes typically dominate because at the level of the plume outflow
their phase speed is approximately equal and opposite to the vertical advection in
the ‘filling box’. Also, the approximate balance between phase speed and advection
is found to hold throughout the tank, resulting in the observed quasi-steady flow
structure. Viscosity causes the horizontal velocity in the shear layers to decrease with
distance above/below the plume outflow, and is thought to be responsible for a
low-frequency oscillation in the flow structure that is observed during experiments.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
19 articles.
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