Abstract
The generation of topographic internal waves (IWs) by the sum of an
oscillatory and a steady flow is investigated experimentally and with a
linear model. The two forcing flows represent the combination of a tidal
constituent and a weaker quasi-steady flow interacting with an abyssal
hill. The combined forcings cause a coupling between internal tides and
lee waves that impacts their dynamics of internal waves as well as the
energy carried away. An asymmetry is observed in the structure of
upstream and downstream internal wave beams due to a Doppler shift
effect. This asymmetry is enhanced for the narrowest ridge on which a
super-buoyancy (ω>N) downstream beam and an evanescent
upstream beam are measured.
Energy fluxes are measured
and compared with the linear model, that has been extended to account
for the coupling mechanism. The structure and amplitude of energy fluxes
match well in most regimes, showing the relevance of the linear
prediction for IW wave energy budgets, while the energy flux toward IW
beams is limited by the generation of periodic vortices in a particular
experiment. The upstream-bias energy flux - and consequently net
horizontal momentum - described in Shakespeare [2020] is measured in
the experiments.
The coupling mechanism plays an
important role in the pathway to IW induced mixing, that has previously
been quantified independently for lee waves and internal tides. Hence,
future parameterizations of IW processes ought to include the coupling
mechanism to quantify its impact on the global distribution of mixing.