Dynamics of Three-Dimensional Turbulent Wall Plumes and Implications for Estimates of Submarine Glacier Melting

Author:

Ezhova Ekaterina1,Cenedese Claudia2,Brandt Luca3

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research, and Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

2. Physical Oceanography Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts

3. Linné FLOW Centre, and Swedish e-Science Research Centre, Department of Mechanics, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

AbstractSubglacial discharges have been observed to generate buoyant plumes along the ice face of Greenland tidewater glaciers. These plumes have been traditionally modeled using classical plume theory, and their characteristic parameters (e.g., velocity) are employed in the widely used three-equation melt parameterization. However, the applicability of plume theory for three-dimensional turbulent wall plumes is questionable because of the complex near-wall plume dynamics. In this study, corrections to the classical plume theory are introduced to account for the presence of a wall. In particular, the drag and entrainment coefficients are quantified for a three-dimensional turbulent wall plume using data from direct numerical simulations. The drag coefficient is found to be an order of magnitude larger than that for a boundary layer flow over a flat plate at a similar Reynolds number. This result suggests a significant increase in the melting estimates by the current parameterization. However, the volume flux in a wall plume is found to be one-half that of a conical plume that has 2 times the buoyancy flux. This finding suggests that the total entrainment (per unit area) of ambient water is the same and that the plume scalar characteristics (i.e., temperature and salinity) can be predicted reasonably well using classical plume theory.

Funder

Linne FLOW Centre at KTH

Academy of Finland

Vetenskapsrådet

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Oceanography

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