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Variable physical drivers of near-surface turbulence in a regulated river
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  • Sofya Guseva,
  • Mika Aurela,
  • Alicia Cortes,
  • Rigel Kivi,
  • Eliisa Selina Lotsari,
  • Sally Macintyre,
  • Ivan Mammarella,
  • Anne Ojala,
  • Victor M Stepanenko,
  • Petteri Uotila,
  • Aki Vähä,
  • Timo Vesala,
  • Marcus B. Wallin,
  • Andreas Lorke
Sofya Guseva
University Koblenz-Landau (Landau)

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Mika Aurela
Finnish Meteorological Institute
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Alicia Cortes
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Rigel Kivi
Finnish Meteorological Institute
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Eliisa Selina Lotsari
University of Eastern Finland
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Sally Macintyre
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Ivan Mammarella
University of Helsinki
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Anne Ojala
University of Helsinki
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Victor M Stepanenko
Lomonosov Moscow State University
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Petteri Uotila
University of Helsinki
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Aki Vähä
University of Helsinki
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Timo Vesala
University of Helsinki, Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research
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Marcus B. Wallin
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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Andreas Lorke
University of Koblenz and Landau
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Abstract

Inland waters, such as lakes, reservoirs and rivers, are important sources of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. A key parameter that regulates the gas exchange between water and the atmosphere is the gas transfer velocity, which itself is controlled by near-surface turbulence in the water. While in lakes and reservoirs, near-surface turbulence is mainly driven by atmospheric forcing, in shallow rivers and streams it is generated by flow-induced bottom friction. Large rivers represent a transition between these two cases. Near-surface turbulence has rarely been observed in rivers and the drivers of turbulence have not been quantified. We obtained continuous measurements of flow velocity and fluctuations from which we quantified turbulence, as the rate of dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy ($\varepsilon$) over the ice-free season in a large regulated river in Northern Finland. Atmospheric forcing was observed simultaneously. Measured values of $\varepsilon$ were well predicted from bulk parameters, including mean flow velocity, wind speed, surface heat flux and a one-dimensional numerical turbulence model. Values ranged from $\sim 10^{-9}$ m$^2$ s$^{-3}$ to $10^{-5}$ m$^2$ s$^{-3}$. Atmospheric forcing and river flow contributed to near-surface turbulence a similar fraction of the time, with variability in near-surface dissipation rate occurring at diel time scales, when the flow velocity was strongly affected by downstream dam operation. By combining scaling relations for boundary-layer turbulence at the river bed and at the air-water interface, we derived a simple model for estimating the relative contributions of wind speed and bottom friction in rivers as a function of flow depth.
Nov 2021Published in Water Resources Research volume 57 issue 11. 10.1029/2020WR027939