Full Reynolds stress tensor of convective turbulence estimated with
paired acoustic Doppler current profilers
Abstract
Convective turbulence driven by gravitational instability is a
fundamental mixing mechanism in geophysical flows, but in situ
estimation of its characteristics is obscured by the background flows
and the relatively slow temporal scales. We present characteristics of
the full Reynolds tensor from a convective surface boundary layer of an
ice-covered lake. The results were obtained by using an original method
of measuring the full set of turbulent stresses by a combined use of two
ADCPs. The strong horizontal shear stress was revealed as a
characteristic feature of free convection differing from the
“conventional” turbulent boundary flows. The ratio of normal stresses
along vertical and horizontal axes remained below 1/4, suggesting
strongly anisotropic character of turbulence. The vertical r.m.s.
velocity fluctuations obeyed the buoyancy flux scaling with the
coefficient of 1/3, which is at lower boundary of the previously
reported values.