The near-inertial band vertical displacements at mooring DN have a rms value of
.
We seek to determine whether the observed vertical displacements are consistent with the horizontal motions of a freely propagating near-inertial internal wave, or if the vertical displacements are the result of the near-inertial horizontal motions directed across the slope, which must satisfy a no normal flow condition at the boundary.
The amplitude of the velocity field associated with a freely propagating internal wave can be expressed as
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(5) | ||
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(6) |
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(7) |
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(8) |
Alternatively, near the boundary, the flow has to satisfy a zero normal flow condition, so that
and
are related by
In our case, for a near-inertial wave of frequency
, a buoyancy frequency
, a local Coriolis frequency
, and a topographic slope of
, the ratio of vertical displacement amplitude to horizontal velocity amplitude is
for a free wave, and
for a wave encountering the slope.
To compare this theoretical value of the ratio of vertical displacement to horizontal velocity to our measurements, we analyze in more detail the period of high near-inertial energy around day 375 (Figure 4.3 and 4.5). The current and temperature data (Figure 4.3b and d) are low-passed filtered between 0.7 and 0.9 cpd (Figure 4.5). We observe near-inertial across-slope velocities of
amplitude , associated with a vertical displacement amplitude of
, leading to a ratio of displacement to horizontal velocity of
, close to the theoretical ratio of
obtained above for a wave along the local topographical slope. The phase between temperature and velocity is such that downslope (upslope) flow is associated with increasing (decreasing) temperature. Unfortunately, no current data were available further than
to compare with the temperature data. Above
, the low-pass filtered temperature shows an average upward phase (downward energy) propagation of
(Figure 4.6b). The amplitude of the temperature oscillations also decreases by a factor of 2 between
and
, consistent with the observations from Figure 4.1. We conclude that the incoming, downward propagating, near-inertial wave is constrained by the supercritical slope in the lower
to produce vertical displacement larger than theoretically predicted.
We only have measurements for a very limited area of a complicated ridge slope system. Considering the locally supercritical slope, and the small horizontal scales (100's of meters in the horizontal, 10's of meters in the vertical) of the topographic features in the mooring area (Figure 3.12) compared to the horizontal scales of a typical near-inertial wave (10's of km in the horizontal, 100's of meters in the vertical), we did not consider here the theoretical treatment of the reflection of the NIW by a theoretical plane boundary as was done by Eriksen (1982) or Müller and Liu (2000).
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