Abstract
Major gaps exist in our understanding of the pathways between internal
wave generation and breaking in the Southern Ocean, with important
implications for the distribution of internal wave-driven mixing, its
sensitivity to change, and the necessary ingredients of mixing
parameterizations. Here we assess the dominant processes in internal
wave evolution by characterizing wave and mesoscale flow scales based on
full-depth measurements in a Southern Ocean mixing hot spot and a ray
tracing calculation. The exercise highlights the importance of Antarctic
Circumpolar Current (ACC) jets as a dominant influence on internal wave
life cycles through advection, the modification of wave characteristics
via wave-mean flow interactions, and the set-up of critical layers for
both upward- and downward-propagating waves. Our findings suggest that
it is important to represent mesoscale flow impacts in parameterizations
of internal wave-driven mixing in the Southern Ocean.