Author:
MELVILLE W. KENDALL,SHEAR ROBERT,VERON FABRICE
Abstract
We present laboratory measurements of the generation and evolution
of Langmuir
circulations as an instability of a wind-driven surface shear layer. The
shear layer,
which is generated by an accelerating wind starting from rest above a quiescent
water surface, both accelerates and deepens monotonically until the inception
of the
Langmuir circulations. The Langmuir circulations closely follow the initial
growth
of the wind waves and rapidly lead to vertical mixing of the horizontal
momentum
and a deceleration of the surface layer. Prior to the appearance of the
Langmuir
circulations, the depth of the shear layer scales with
(vt)1/2 (v is the kinematic
viscosity and t is time), in accordance with molecular
rather than turbulent transport.
For final wind speeds in the range 3 to 5 m s−1, the wavenumber
of the
most unstable Langmuir circulation normalized by the surface wavenumber,
k*lc, is 0.68±0.24, at a reciprocal
Langmuir number,
La−1, of 52±21. The observations are compared
with
available theoretical results, although none are directly applicable to
the conditions
of the experiments. The implications of this work for the generation and
evolution of
Langmuir circulations in the ocean and other natural water bodies are discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
96 articles.
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