Buoyant gravity currents along a sloping bottom in a rotating fluid
The dynamics of buoyant gravity currents in a rotating reference frame is a classical problem relevant to geophysical applications such as river water entering the ocean. However, existing scaling theories are limited to currents propagating along a vertical wall, a situation almost never realized i...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of fluid mechanics 2002-08, Vol.464, p.251-278 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The dynamics of buoyant gravity currents in a rotating reference frame is a classical problem relevant to
geophysical applications such as river water entering the ocean. However, existing scaling theories are
limited to currents propagating along a vertical wall, a situation almost never realized in the ocean. A
scaling theory is proposed for the structure (width and depth), nose speed and flow field characteristics of
buoyant gravity currents over a sloping bottom as functions of the gravity current transport Q,
density anomaly g′, Coriolis frequency f, and bottom slope α. The nose
propagation speed is cp ∼ cw/
(1 + cw/cα) and the width of the buoyant gravity
current is Wp ∼ cw/
f(1 + cw/cα), where
cw = (2Qg′ f)1/4 is the nose propagation
speed in the vertical wall limit (steep bottom slope) and
cα = αg/f is the nose propagation speed
in the slope-controlled limit (small bottom slope). The key non-dimensional parameter
is cw/cα, which indicates whether the bottom slope
is steep enough to be considered a vertical wall
(cw/cα → 0) or approaches the
slope-controlled limit (cw/cα → ∞). The
scaling theory compares well against a new set of laboratory experiments which span steep to gentle bottom
slopes (cw/cα = 0.11–13.1). Additionally,
previous laboratory and numerical model results are reanalysed and shown to support the proposed
scaling theory. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1120 1469-7645 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0022112002008868 |