Observations of tidally driven turbulence over steep, small-scale topography embedded in the Tasman slope

Author:

Marques Olavo B.1,Alford Matthew H.1,Pinkel Robert1,MacKinnon Jennifer A.1,Voet Gunnar1,Klymak Jody M.2,Nash Jonathan D.3

Affiliation:

1. a Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California

2. b School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, and Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada

3. c College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University

Abstract

Abstract Enhanced diapycnal mixing induced by the near-bottom breaking of internal waves is an essential component of the lower meridional overturning circulation. Despite its crucial role in the ocean circulation, tidally driven internal wave breaking is challenging to observe due to its inherently short spatial and temporal scales. We present detailed moored and shipboard observations that resolve the spatio-temporal variability of the tidal response over a small-scale bump embedded in the continental slope of Tasmania. Cross-shore tidal currents drive a nonlinear trapped response over the steep bottom around the bump. The observations are roughly consistent with two-dimensional high-mode tidal lee-wave theory. However, the alongshore tidal velocities are large, suggesting that the alongshore bathymetric variability modulates the tidal response driven by the cross-shore tidal flow. The semidiurnal tide and energy dissipation rate are correlated at subtidal timescales, but with complex temporal variability. Energy dissipation from a simple scattering model shows that the elevated near-bottom turbulence can be sustained by the impinging mode-1 internal tide, where the dissipation over the bump is O(1%) of the incident depth-integrated energy flux. Despite this small fraction, tidal dissipation is enhanced over the bump due to steep topography at O(1) km horizontal scale and may locally drive significant diapycnal mixing.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Oceanography

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