On the role of horizontal divergence and vertical velocity in the
evolution of a tidal mixing front from submesoscale-resolving synoptic
in situ observations
- Michelle Albinus,
- Thomas H. Badewien,
- Lisa Gassen,
- Oliver Wurl,
- Jens Meyerjürgens
Abstract
A tidal mixing front in the southern North Sea is analyzed for its
spatial and temporal distribution of the near-surface horizontal
divergence and vertical velocity to understand the evolution of a tidal
mixing front in a highly dynamic, semidiurnal tidal-influenced shallow
shelf sea. A multi-sensor synoptic data set with a focus on the upper 10
m consisting of surface drifters, a drifting sensor chain, and an ADCP
resolving length scales of , as well as subsequent CTD measurements,
revealed a tidal mixing front that consistedof two separate tidal mixing
density filaments that differed in 3D structure. In all observations,
divergence developed with the accelerating tidal current and convergence
evolved out of the deceleration of the tidal current. Vertical
velocities ranged between , with divergence coupled to upwelling and
convergence to downwelling. For the first tidal mixing density filament,
convergence was limited to the upper 4 meters and was suppressed by the
uplift of dense water. For the second filament, convergence was built
from the bottom, propagating throughout the water column. These
observations demonstrate that tidal mixing fronts play a significant
role in promoting vertical transport within the water column.16 Oct 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive 16 Oct 2024Published in ESS Open Archive