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contributor authorLaCasce, J. H.
contributor authorEscartin, J.
contributor authorChassignet, Eric. P.
contributor authorXu, Xiaobiao
date accessioned2019-09-22T09:03:12Z
date available2019-09-22T09:03:12Z
date copyright12/3/2018 12:00:00 AM
date issued2018
identifier otherJPO-D-18-0129.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4262541
description abstractThe stability of a horizontally and vertically sheared surface jet is examined, with a focus on the vertical structure of the resultant eddies. Over a flat bottom, the instability is mixed baroclinic/barotropic, producing strong eddies at depth that are characteristically shifted downstream relative to the surface eddies. Baroclinic instability is suppressed over a large slope for retrograde jets (with a flow antiparallel to topographic wave propagation) and to a lesser extent for prograde jets (with flow parallel to topographic wave propagation), as seen previously. In such cases, barotropic (lateral) instability dominates if the jet is sufficiently narrow. This yields surface eddies whose size is independent of the slope but proportional to the jet width. Deep eddies still form, forced by interfacial motion associated with the surface eddies, but they are weaker than under baroclinic instability and are vertically aligned with the surface eddies. A sinusoidal ridge acts similarly, suppressing baroclinic instability and favoring lateral instability in the upper layer. A ridge with a 1-km wavelength and an amplitude of roughly 10 m is sufficient to suppress baroclinic instability. Surveys of bottom roughness from bathymetry acquired with shipboard multibeam echo sounding reveal that such heights are common beneath the Kuroshio, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, and, to a lesser extent, the Gulf Stream. Consistent with this, vorticity and velocity cross sections from a 1/50° HYCOM simulation suggest that Gulf Stream eddies are vertically aligned, as in the linear stability calculations with strong topography. Thus, lateral instability may be more common than previously thought, owing to topography hindering vertical energy transfer.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleJet Instability over Smooth, Corrugated, and Realistic Bathymetry
typeJournal Paper
journal volume49
journal issue2
journal titleJournal of Physical Oceanography
identifier doi10.1175/JPO-D-18-0129.1
journal fristpage585
journal lastpage605
treeJournal of Physical Oceanography:;2018:;volume 049:;issue 002
contenttypeFulltext


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