Affiliation:
1. Department of Geology and Geophysics, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
Abstract
AbstractThe origin of double-diffusive staircases in the Arctic Ocean is investigated for the particular background setting in which both temperature and salinity increase with depth. Motivated by observations that show the coexistence of thermohaline intrusions and double-diffusive staircases, a linear stability analysis is performed on the governing equations to determine the conditions under which staircases form. It is shown that a double-diffusive staircase can result from interleaving motions if the observed bulk vertical density ratio is below a critical vertical density ratio estimated for particular lateral and vertical background temperature and salinity gradients. Vertical background temperature and salinity gradients dominate over horizontal gradients in determining whether staircases form, with the linear theory indicating that perturbations to stronger vertical temperature gradients are more likely to give rise to a staircase. Examination of Arctic Ocean temperature and salinity measurements indicates that observations are consistent with the theory for reasonable estimates of eddy diffusivity and viscosity.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Cited by
27 articles.
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