Mixing over the steep side of the Cycladic Plateau in the Aegean Sea |
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Authors: | M.C. Gregg M.H. AlfordH. Kontoyiannis V. ZervakisD. Winkel |
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Affiliation: | a Applied Physics Laboratory and School of Oceanography, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105 USAb Applied Physics Laboratory, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105 USAc Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, P.O. Box 712, GR 19013, Anavyssos, Greeced Department of Marine Sciences, Univ. of the Aegean, University Hill, 81100 Mytilene, Greece |
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Abstract: | Intensive microstructure sampling over the southern slope of the Cycladic Plateau found very weak mixing in the pycnocline, centered on a thin minimum of diapycnal diffusivity with Kρ=1.5×10−6 m2 s− 1. Below the pycnocline, Kρ increased exponentially in the bottom 200 m, reaching 1 × 10− 4 m2 s− 1 a few meters above the bottom. Near-bottom mixing was most intense where the bottom slope equaled the characteristic slope of the semi-diurnal internal tide. This suggests internal wave scattering and/or generation at the bottom, a conclusion supported by near-bottom dissipation rates increasing following rising winds and with intensifying internal waves. Several pinnacles on the slope were local mixing hotspots. Signatures included a vertical line of strong mixing in a pinnacle's wake, an hydraulic jump or lee wave over a downstream side of the summit, and a ‘beam’ sloping upward at the near-inertial characteristic slope. Because dissipation rate averages were dominated by strong turbulence, ?/νN2 > 100, the effect on Kρ of alternate mixing efficiencies proposed for this range of turbulent intensity is explored. |
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Keywords: | Aegean Mixing Turbulence Scattering Hydraulic jump |
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