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Stratified shear instabilities in estuarine fluid muds

ORAL

Abstract

Stratified shear instabilities are an important physical process in a variety of environmental flows, and understanding their dynamics is key to modelling turbulent fluxes. In estuaries, the underlying stratification may arise not only from heat and salt, but also from suspended sediment. Here, we compare echosounder observations of shear instabilities growing on a lutocline in a tidally-driven estuarine flow with direct numerical simulations of Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. We explore the relationship between characteristic lengthscales describing to the height of the primary billow (measured from the echosounder data) and the corresponding initial Richardson number and turbulent dissipation rate. While we show that useful parameterizations can be found for both quantities, our estimates suggest that sediment stratification leads to altered scalings which remain to be fully explained.

Publication: Tu, J., Fan, D., Sun, F., Kaminski, A., and Smyth, W. 2022 Shear instabilities and stratified turbulence in an estuarine fluid mud. J. Phys. Oceanogr. [accepted]. doi:10.1175/JPO-D-21-0230.1<br>Tu, J., Fan, D., Lian, Q., Liu, Z., Liu, W., Kaminski, A., and Smyth, W. 2020 Acoustic observations of Kelvin-Helmholtz billows on an estuarine lutocline. J. Geophys. Res.: Oceans (125), e2019JC015383. doi:10.1029/2019JC015383

Presenters

  • Alexis K Kaminski

    UC Berkeley

Authors

  • Alexis K Kaminski

    UC Berkeley

  • Junbiao Tu

    Tongji University

  • William D Smyth

    Oregon State University